US Treasury Secretary Yellen Sees Lower US Recession Risk, Says Consumer Slowdown Needed

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen sees diminishing risk for the US to fall into recession and suggested that a slowdown in consumer spending may be the price to pay for finishing the campaign to contain inflation.

On the chance of a recession, Yellen said “My odds of it, if anything, have gone down — because look at the resilience of the labor market, and inflation is coming down.” She spoke in an interview with Bloomberg News Thursday.

“I’m not going to say it’s not a risk, because the Fed is tightening policy,” she said, alluding to the Federal Reserve’s 10 interest-rate hikes since March 2022, with potentially more to come.

Her remarks contrasted with rising recession concerns across the Atlantic. Economic activity almost stalled in the euro area, based on data compiled by S&P Global published Friday. The reports sent global stocks down, while bonds surged as investors fled to safety amid heightened anxiety that aggressive central bank policy will tip economies there into a downturn.

US data due later Friday are expected to show a cooling in economic activity.

But so far the US economy has proven resilient. A May employment report showed job gains beating all economists’ forecasts. Home construction and retail sales for last month have also shown surprising resilience in the face of the Fed’s aggressive monetary tightening.