Economist Says His Indicator That Predicted Eight US Recessions Is Wrong This Year

Economist Campbell Harvey has had a winning track record since he showed in his dissertation at the University of Chicago decades ago that the shape of the bond yield curve was linked to the path of US economic activity.

US recessions have been preceded by an inverted yield curve — when short term rates exceed those of longer tenors — since the late 1960s. Fast forward to 2023, that’s exactly what’s been happening with the Treasury yield curve in the past month and a half. Yet, Harvey is saying this time the US economy will manage to avoid a real slump even though it will keep slowing down for a bit longer.

“My yield-curve indicator has gone code red, and it’s 8 for 8 in forecasting recessions since 1968 — with no false alarms,” Harvey, now a professor at Duke University’s Fuqua School of Business, said in an interview Tuesday. “I have reasons to believe, however, that it is flashing a false signal.”

The spread between 3-month rates and 10-year yields has plunged from as high as 234 basis points in May 2022 to nearly minus a full percentage point last month. The spread, which Harvey’s work is based on, has been consistently inverted since mid November and hovered Wednesday at around minus 85 basis points.

Despite the curve being inverted for the ninth time since 1968, Harvey said it’s probably not a harbinger for a recession.

One of the reasons is precisely the fact the yield curve-growth relation has become so well known and widely covered in popular media that now it impacts behavior, he said. The awareness induces companies and consumers to take risk-mitigating actions, such as boosting savings and avoiding major investment projects — which bode well for the economy.