| A Cycle Ends 
 
The U.S. and China will reach a deal on trade, but it won’t end the trade       war.
Inconclusive 
  
 
This forecast took an abrupt turn in early May. By all       accounts, a deal was imminent if only the two sides could       agree on mechanisms to make it stick. Then, suddenly, the U.S.       accused China of reneging on various commitments, and by the end of the       week, U.S. tariffs on $250 billion in Chinese goods were       increased by 15 percent. Things only intensified from there,       with both sides making a series of moves you’d probably do only if you       thought the window for a deal had closed. Nonetheless, we still think       both sides have ample interest in striking at least a limited deal – and       that, ultimately, the issue will hinge above all on whether economic       and political pressure in the U.S. rises enough to compel the White House       to settle for quite a bit less than it has demanded in public.       Indeed, tensions have cooled enough for Xi and Trump to meet last weekend       at the G-20 summit, and the two sides are reportedly discussing a       “cease-fire,” with the U.S. holding off on imposing new tariffs on a       staggering $300 billion in Chinese goods in order to allow China to save       enough face to return to the negotiating table (and to stave off a       mounting backlash from U.S. businesses). 
 
The technology front of the trade war recently got much       more interesting. The U.S. had targeted Chinese tech giants like Huawei and       had started the process of starving them of critical foreign components       like semiconductors. In response, China threatened to cut off the U.S. from rare       earth elements. And then, just like that, on June 29, Trump       reversed course, saying U.S. companies could, in fact, sell to Huawei.       Yet he left open the possibility that Huawei will again be deemed a       threat to national security down the road, particularly if trade talks       stall once more. 
  
A decline in       living standards will lead to social unrest in Russia. It won’t be enough       to effect regime change.
On Track 
  
 
 
Yet there was only modest protest activity in the second       quarter. There were no demonstrations against falling real incomes (or at       least they were not announced). The biggest protests covered issues       largely unrelated to living standards: border issues in Ingushetia and Dagestan, churches in       Yekaterinburg, the construction of landfills in Arkhangelsk, and so on.       (It’s worth noting that authorities reportedly used heavy force to break       up the protests.) 
 
One area we seem to have gotten wrong was that value-added       tax reform would dramatically increase the costs of products, and that       Russian households would suffer for it. That hasn’t yet happened, we       believe, because we failed to take into account that most Russians spend       nearly half of their income on food and utilities, and the VAT rate on       basic products never changed. 
 
Still, we consider our forecast on track. The standard of       living continues to fall, and the nature of the protests has changed. The       protests are less intense than they once were, but they are now       qualitatively different: Much of the population understands that it can       join protests on their own, not under the auspices of a political party,       as is so often the case. 
  
To manage the       fallout of the trade war, China will intensify its suppression of       internal dissent and employ modest fiscal stimulus to sustain growth.
On Track 
  
 
As we mentioned in our first quarter update,       this forecast has already proved accurate, more or less. Throughout the       second quarter China has moved forward on the programs announced earlier       in the year and implemented new ones and corresponding monetary policy to       support it – all while resisting the urge to let the stimulus flow       freely. In April, China began to offer subsidies to support the purchase       of home appliances to encourage domestic consumption. It reaffirmed its       support for small businesses, including by lowering the interest rate on       loans, and in May it followed up with a cut to the reserve requirement       ration to buttress the economy during the trade war. 
 
Beijing also announced new measures to reduce individuals’       taxes to encourage spending while relaxing restrictions on local       government spending – the biggest source of stimulus in the wake of the       2008 crisis. Total credit in China continues to expand, but the country       still has some severe liquidity problems, and it can’t quite figure out       how to get lending to the private sector. As a result, additional       stimulus is likely. 
 
As for suppression, Beijing continues to crack down on       labor groups, religious groups and any other civic organization capable       of organizing against the state. Its crackdown on wayward elements in the       army continues; 70 senior officers were reportedly demoted last week for       connections to an ousted general. Curiously, the Communist Party of China       also outlined plans to send millions of youth to the countryside for       “volunteering” assignments, a throwback Mao’s mobilization during the       Cultural Revolution. 
  
Economic       growth in much of the European Union will slow, and some countries’       economies will contract. Germany is especially vulnerable to a recession.
On Track 
  
 
Headlined by Germany and Italy, European economies       continue their trend of slow growth. German first quarter output came in       a bit stronger than expected but was still a tepid 0.4 percent. The IHS       Markit Purchasing Managers’ Index suggests that Germany will see modest       growth again in the second quarter, but expectations for the next 12       months are the weakest they have been in more than four and a half years.       Italy peeked out of its recession in the first quarter, growing by 0.1       percent, but the Italian national statistics bureau has already warned       the public not to get used to it, saying last week that there was a       “relatively high” chance that the economy contracted again in the second       quarter. For the eurozone economy as a whole, growth is expected to tick       back to 0.3 percent this quarter after 0.4 percent growth in the first       three months of the year, according to the joint assessment of the German       Ifo Institute, the KOF Swiss Economic Institute, and the Italian       statistical institute Istat. 
 
Poland continues to be an exception. In terms of GDP per       capita, the Polish economy has reached 71 percent of the average level of       the EU. So far, the economy is stable, supported as it is by record-low       unemployment ahead of elections, but the sharp rise in consumer prices       can lead to a slowdown in economic growth. It is expected that the slowdown,       although quite soft, will begin after the elections, which will be held       later this year. 
  
U.S. economic       growth will slow. The U.S. is approaching the end of its current       expansionary cycle, and a recession before the year’s end would not       surprise us.
Inconclusive 
  
 
Three months ago, we concluded that while the exact timing       of the next recession was in doubt, it was clear that U.S. economic       growth was slowing. Its subsequent economic performance quickly humbled       us. Data from the U.S. Department of Commerce in April showed U.S. GDP       growth rise to 3.2 percent, beating most consensus forecasts and       exceeding our own expectations. In May, the good times continued to roll.       The initial estimate of first quarter growth beat consensus estimates on       how far down the growth rate would be adjusted (official data shows a 3.1       inflation-adjusted growth rate for the first quarter). 
 
That’s not to say that all news is good news for the       economy. The three-month and 10-year yield curve inverted briefly in       March before recovering, only to invert again at the end of May. This       time the inversion seems to have more resilience, having widened in       recent weeks. The yield curve inversion is not ironclad proof of imminent       recession, but it is a valuable sign for gauging how investors feel about       the U.S. economy. And apparently they are pessimistic despite       better-than-expected growth rates, low unemployment (3.6 percent), and       even some positive if tepid growth in real wages. 
 
All of that comes in the context of U.S. trade policy that       can best be described as uncertain. With the U.S. and China resuming       trade negotiations last week ahead of the Trump-Xi meeting, there may be       even more room for the U.S. economy to grow. For now, we are downgrading       our grade of this forecast from on-track to inconclusive. | 
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