The culprit? The tax cuts and the spending package passed by Congress. The risk of a buyers’ “strike,” in which investors demand sharply higher yields for holding more US Treasuries, spikes in these conditions. That’s not the base case in our forecast, but it would be a very ugly development.
So, how have these three factors combined to impact our forecasts?
Strong growth and rising inflation underpin our projection of higher interest rates. We’ve expected rates to rise for a while, and so far the moves have been generally in line with our forecasts. We’d prefer to see rising growth expectations be the only driver of higher rates, but rising inflation will inevitably play some role. That’s why we think growth will stabilize, not continue to accelerate.
The fiscal indiscipline, though, is beyond what we expected. We think the effect—over time—will be unambiguously negative.
The Price of Abandoning Fiscal Discipline
As we mentioned, fiscal deterioration increases the risk of a buyers’ strike. Again, that’s NOT our base case, and we have no way to forecast when—or if—a disruptive market event will happen. But we can say confidently that the risks of that scenario have risen. Even if that sort of disruption doesn’t happen, the lack of fiscal discipline—and the associated increase in the supply of US Treasuries—is likely to push rates higher than growth and inflation suggest they should be.
The other big issue with expanding the budget deficit now: it’s harder to do it the next time the economy slumps. Fiscal stimulus makes sense in a downturn, but right now is exactly the time to be saving money to prepare for the next slowdown. When that time comes, the stimulus will cost a lot more than it needs to.
None of this is a reason to panic in the near term. Growth is strong, which can hide a lot of structural weaknesses. But higher deficit spending borrows from future growth to boost today’s growth. It’s better to have fuel to burn when the economy is weak than it is to toss fuel onto an already hot economy.
As we see it, rates should continue to rise in the next few months, and we’re watching closely for signs that rising inflationary pressure or an increasing debt supply could push rates up more sharply than we expect right now.