34% of economists in survey expect a US recession in 2021

Economists are concerned about the risks of some of Trump's economic policies

34% of economists in survey expect a US recession in 2021 Representative image

A number of US business economists appear sufficiently concerned about the risks of some of President Donald Trump's economic policies that they expect a recession in the US by the end of 2021.

Thirty-four per cent of economists surveyed by the National Association for Business Economics, in a report being released on Monday, said they believe a slowing economy will tip into recession in 2021.

That's up from 25 per cent in a survey taken in February. Only 2 per cent of those polled expect a recession to begin this year, while 38 per cent predict that it will occur in 2020.

Trump, however, has dismissed concerns about a recession, offering an optimistic outlook for the economy after last week's steep drop in the financial markets and saying on Sunday, "I don't think we're having a recession."

A strong economy is key to the Republican president's 2020 reelection prospects.

The economists have previously expressed concern that Trump's tariffs and higher budget deficits could eventually dampen the economy.

The Trump administration has imposed tariffs on goods from many key US trading partners, from China and Europe to Mexico and Canada.

Officials maintain that the tariffs, which are taxes on imports, will help the administration gain more favourable terms of trade.

But US trading partners have simply retaliated with tariffs of their own.

Trade between the US and China, the two biggest global economies, has plunged.

Trump decided last Wednesday to postpone until December 15 tariffs on about 60 per cent of an additional USD 300 billion of Chinese imports, granting a reprieve from a planned move that would have extended duties to nearly everything the US buys from China.

The financial markets last week signalled the possibility of a US recession, adding to concerns over the ongoing trade tensions and word from Britain and Germany that their economies are shrinking.

The economists surveyed by the NABE were skeptical about prospects for success of the latest round of US-China trade negotiations.

Only 5 per cent predicted that a comprehensive trade deal would result, 64 per cent suggested a superficial agreement was possible and nearly 25 per cent expected nothing to be agreed upon by the two countries.

The 226 respondents, who work mainly for corporations and trade associations, were surveyed between July 14 and August 1.

That was before the White House announced 10 per cent tariffs on the additional USD 300 billion of Chinese imports, the Chinese currency dipped below the seven-yuan-to-USD 1 level for the first time in 11 years and the Trump administration formally labeled China a currency manipulator.

As a whole, the business economists' recent responses have represented a rebuke of the Trump administration's overall approach to the economy.

Still, for now, most economic signs appear solid.

Employers are adding jobs at a steady pace, the unemployment rate remains near a 50-year low and consumers are optimistic.

US retail sales figures out last Thursday showed that they jumped in July by the most in four months.

The survey showed a steep decline in the percentage of economists who found the USD 1.5 trillion in tax cuts over the next decade "too stimulative" and likely to produce higher budget deficits that should be reduced, to 51 per cent currently from 71 per cent in August 2018.