US Economy Set For Modest Growth In 2026, But Economists See Stubborn Inflation And Weakening Job Market

MarketDash Editorial Team
14 days ago
A new survey of 42 professional forecasters projects 2% GDP growth for 2026, but the outlook includes persistent inflation around 2.6%, rising unemployment to 4.5%, and potential headwinds from tariffs and immigration policy changes.

The U.S. economy is heading for modest growth in 2026, according to a fresh survey from the National Association for Business Economics. But don't break out the champagne just yet—the forecast comes with some uncomfortable fine print about jobs and inflation that's worth paying attention to.

The Growth Picture: Better, But Complicated

The NABE survey, conducted between November 3 and November 11 with 42 professional forecasters, pegs median GDP growth at 2% for 2026. That's an improvement from the 1.8% projected in October and considerably rosier than the 1.3% estimate from back in June, according to Reuters.

What's driving the upgrade? Stronger consumer spending and business investment are doing the heavy lifting. But here's where it gets tricky: the Trump administration's new import taxes could shave off a quarter percentage point or more from growth. Add in stricter immigration enforcement, and economists are seeing some real drags on the economic engine.

On the inflation front, prices are proving stickier than anyone would like. The forecast now shows inflation finishing this year at 2.9%, barely below October's 3% projection, and only edging down to 2.6% in 2026. Economists point to tariffs as responsible for a substantial chunk of that persistent inflation.

The job market picture is equally concerning. Employment gains are expected to stay weak, with unemployment rising to 4.5% in early 2026 and holding steady at that level through year-end. Meanwhile, the Federal Reserve is anticipated to cut rates by a quarter-point in December, followed by just another half-point reduction next year as policy moves toward neutral territory.

Administration Officials Paint Rosier Picture

The survey arrives as the economy shows some genuine strength. Second-quarter GDP grew at a 3.8% annual rate, the fastest pace since Q3 2023. The Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta recently bumped its third-quarter real GDP outlook to 4.2% from 4.1%.

Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick jumped on that momentum Friday, predicting potential "6% GDP growth" under President Donald Trump. He's betting on a historic wave of manufacturing construction and tariff-driven capital investment to fuel the expansion.

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told NBC News on Sunday that despite rate-sensitive sectors like housing still struggling, the U.S. economy isn't in recession. He did acknowledge that the 43-day government shutdown knocked 1.5% off GDP.

Recession Worries Haven't Disappeared

Not everyone shares the administration's optimism. Bill Gross, the veteran investor and PIMCO co-founder, expects the Fed to deliver another rate cut in December, arguing that ongoing market volatility and economic strain will force their hand.

In October, JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon warned that a 2026 recession remains possible despite currently strong GDP numbers. His concern? Inflation may not cool as expected. That caution echoes Moody's Analytics chief economist Mark Zandi, who says recession risks remain "uncomfortably high."

So while 2026 might bring growth, it's the kind of expansion that comes with plenty of asterisks attached.

US Economy Set For Modest Growth In 2026, But Economists See Stubborn Inflation And Weakening Job Market

MarketDash Editorial Team
14 days ago
A new survey of 42 professional forecasters projects 2% GDP growth for 2026, but the outlook includes persistent inflation around 2.6%, rising unemployment to 4.5%, and potential headwinds from tariffs and immigration policy changes.

The U.S. economy is heading for modest growth in 2026, according to a fresh survey from the National Association for Business Economics. But don't break out the champagne just yet—the forecast comes with some uncomfortable fine print about jobs and inflation that's worth paying attention to.

The Growth Picture: Better, But Complicated

The NABE survey, conducted between November 3 and November 11 with 42 professional forecasters, pegs median GDP growth at 2% for 2026. That's an improvement from the 1.8% projected in October and considerably rosier than the 1.3% estimate from back in June, according to Reuters.

What's driving the upgrade? Stronger consumer spending and business investment are doing the heavy lifting. But here's where it gets tricky: the Trump administration's new import taxes could shave off a quarter percentage point or more from growth. Add in stricter immigration enforcement, and economists are seeing some real drags on the economic engine.

On the inflation front, prices are proving stickier than anyone would like. The forecast now shows inflation finishing this year at 2.9%, barely below October's 3% projection, and only edging down to 2.6% in 2026. Economists point to tariffs as responsible for a substantial chunk of that persistent inflation.

The job market picture is equally concerning. Employment gains are expected to stay weak, with unemployment rising to 4.5% in early 2026 and holding steady at that level through year-end. Meanwhile, the Federal Reserve is anticipated to cut rates by a quarter-point in December, followed by just another half-point reduction next year as policy moves toward neutral territory.

Administration Officials Paint Rosier Picture

The survey arrives as the economy shows some genuine strength. Second-quarter GDP grew at a 3.8% annual rate, the fastest pace since Q3 2023. The Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta recently bumped its third-quarter real GDP outlook to 4.2% from 4.1%.

Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick jumped on that momentum Friday, predicting potential "6% GDP growth" under President Donald Trump. He's betting on a historic wave of manufacturing construction and tariff-driven capital investment to fuel the expansion.

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told NBC News on Sunday that despite rate-sensitive sectors like housing still struggling, the U.S. economy isn't in recession. He did acknowledge that the 43-day government shutdown knocked 1.5% off GDP.

Recession Worries Haven't Disappeared

Not everyone shares the administration's optimism. Bill Gross, the veteran investor and PIMCO co-founder, expects the Fed to deliver another rate cut in December, arguing that ongoing market volatility and economic strain will force their hand.

In October, JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon warned that a 2026 recession remains possible despite currently strong GDP numbers. His concern? Inflation may not cool as expected. That caution echoes Moody's Analytics chief economist Mark Zandi, who says recession risks remain "uncomfortably high."

So while 2026 might bring growth, it's the kind of expansion that comes with plenty of asterisks attached.