Despite a range of shocks, the global economy stayed resilient throughout 2023. What course will it take in 2024?
From raging inflation to geopolitics to bank failures, successive crises have buffeted the world’s economies, but they mostly remain on firm footing. As we enter 2024, powerful factors still support a soft landing. However, risks to a benign base case are tilting to the downside.
Slower Growth Likely Ahead, with Better Balance
We think the global economy still has enough momentum to keep a soft landing the most likely outcome, though a soft landing is still a landing. With fundamentals eroded and higher rates exerting mounting pressures, growth will likely slow significantly in 2024. That’s not necessarily bad news: slower growth should keep inflation receding, allowing central banks to start cutting rates. This path should gradually bring the global economy into better balance.
Consumer Strength Is Key to Economic Resilience
Robust consumer spending was key to economic resilience in 2023, particularly in the US. The labor market far exceeded our expectations in 2023, providing income that supported spending. Hiring was robust and wage growth comfortably beat inflation. Cracks began to show late in the year, so we don’t think spending in 2024 will be as strong. The pace of hiring has decelerated, job openings are down, unemployment claims rose, and surveys of businesses and consumers suggested that workers were finding it harder to secure new jobs.
Still, those data only show cracks—overall, labor markets remain strong. Global unemployment rates are very low by historical standards and layoffs haven’t yet risen materially. We expect slower hiring to eventually transition into layoffs, but the labor market likely has enough forward momentum to carry consumers well into 2024, if not beyond. The key takeaway: a soft landing in the labor market will translate into a soft landing for the broader economy.
It wasn’t the labor market alone that boosted consumption in 2023. Stockpiles of excess pandemic-era savings also cushioned the blow from higher inflation. Fiscal support in the US and Europe enabled most developed-market households to maintain their standard of living even as prices rose, especially once inflation cooled late in the year. Today, those extra savings seem to be depleted (Display), which will make navigating future shocks more challenging in 2024. It’s another reason we expect slower growth in the coming quarters.