U.S. ECONOMY TO SHRINK 24% FROM APRIL to JUNE 2020: Goldman Sachs

Goldman Sachs predicts economy will shrink 24% in Q2 2020 then end year down 3.8%. Prediction as of March 20. - The Basis Point

This post originally appeared on The Basis Point: U.S. ECONOMY TO SHRINK 24% FROM APRIL to JUNE 2020: Goldman Sachs

Goldman Sachs predicts economy will shrink 24% in Q2 2020 then end year down 3.8%. Prediction as of March 20. - The Basis Point

Just four days ago, Goldman Sachs’ economics team said the U.S. economy (measured by GDP) would drop 5% in Q2. Yesterday Bank of America’s economics team said the economy would drop 12%. Today Goldman revised their estimate to say the economy would drop 24% in Q2 alone, then the rest of the year for annualized GDP estimates look like this:

Q1: -6%
Q2: -24%
Q3: +12%
Q4: +10%
2020: -3.1%

A recession is traditionally defined as negative GDP for 2 consecutive quarters. This qualifies given the prediction of a 6% drop in Q1 plus the gut wrenching drop of 24% for Q2.

GDP of -24% for a single quarter far dwarfs the sum of any multi-quarter declines in modern economic history, including post 2008 financial crisis years.

So even though Goldman predicts a huge bounce from -24% in Q2 to +12 in Q3, the Q2 number alone is eye-popping. If it plays out anywhere near this, it’ll be a very painful period for millions of Americans.

Below are details from Goldman, including employment predictions.

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GOLDMAN SACHS

U.S. DAILY – A SUDDEN STOP FOR THE U.S. ECONOMY

Over the last few days social distancing measures have shut down normal life in much of the US. News reports point to a sudden surge in layoffs and a collapse in spending, both historic in size and speed, as well as shutdowns of many schools, stores, offices, manufacturing plants, and construction sites. These developments argue for a much sharper drop in GDP in Q1 and Q2.

We expect declines in services consumption, manufacturing activity, and building investment to lower the level of GDP in April by nearly 10%, a drag that we expect to fade only gradually in later months. We now forecast quarter-on-quarter annualized growth rates of -6% in Q1, -24% in Q2, +12% in Q3, and +10% in Q4, leaving full-year growth at -3.8% on an annual average basis and -3.1% on a Q4/Q4 basis.

These downgrades to our growth forecasts imply a large upward revision to our unemployment rate forecast. Using three approaches—the empirical relationship between GDP and unemployment, the experience of Hurricane Katrina, and a bottom-up analysis of likely job losses by sector and occupation—we estimate a 5.5pp increase in the U3 unemployment rate to a 9% peak in coming quarters. However, we have more confidence that a large increase will be apparent in the U5 rate—which includes individuals who want a job but aren’t actively looking—than in the standard U3 rate.

A Sudden Stop for The U.S. Economy

Over the last few days social distancing measures have shut down normal life in much of the US. News reports point to a sudden surge in layoffs and a collapse in spending, both of which appear to be historic in size and speed. We are therefore making further large downward revisions to our economic forecast.