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U.S. economy will pull off soft landing in 2024, CBO projects

The U.S. economy is on track to avoid a recession next year as inflation returns to normal, according to new economic projections released by the Congressional Budget Office.

Why it matters: The nonpartisan agency expects more moderate economic conditions in 2024 — including slower growth and higher jobless rates — than previously anticipated. But its projections suggest America will skirt an all-out contraction in growth.

By the numbers: The CBO projects the economy will grow 1.5% in 2024 — a slower rate of growth than the 2.5% estimated in February — before rebounding to 2.2% in 2025.

The agency sees inflation — as measured by the Federal Reserve’s preferred gauge of price growth, the personal consumption expenditures index —falling to 2.1% next year, “reflecting softer labor markets and slower increases in rents.”

The intrigue: The CBO’s projections are largely in line with those released by the Federal Reserve earlier this week, which showed a slowdown in economic growth.

Of note: The CBO also sees the Fed holding interest rates at current levels through the beginning of next year then slashing rates “in response to slowing inflation and rising unemployment.”
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