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Dr. Chris Kuehl Gives Economic Outlook in Uncertain Global Environment

Date: 8 March 2022
Source:
Dr. Chris Kuehl
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FGIAonline.org

Date: 8 March 2022

Economist Dr. Chris Kuehl spoke at the 2022 FGIA Hybrid Annual Conference, offering his perspective on the current strife in Ukraine, the future of economic recovery, the labor shortage and a construction forecast for the U.S. and Canada.

The Managing Director of Armada Corporate Intelligence admitted things are harder to predict at the moment due to the uncertainty caused by Russia鈥檚 invasion of Ukraine only one week ago, causing large shifts internationally with the global economy.

Russia鈥檚 Invasion of Ukraine

Kuehl began with what was at the time of the session on Wednesday the most recently available information about how the Ukraine refugee crisis could affect the global economy. Kuehl noted that the expectation was that Russia would come to power quickly and that no military response was expected from the U.S. or Europe. 鈥淓urope could suffer from sanctions against Russia,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut the Russians will suffer down the road. Oil prices are skyrocketing because the big oil buyers are boycotting Russian oil. That means 70 percent of that oil is not being sold.鈥

Kuehl noted that the sanctions on Russia only work if all countries enforce them. China continues to do business with Russia. 鈥淐hina only does what is in its best interests,鈥 Kuehl said. 鈥淐hina has a lot of leverage with Russia when it comes to prices. Now we wait to see [how China reacts].鈥

Economic Recovery

Kuehl said his organization initially predicted the U.S. would see 3.5-4 percent GDP growth this year but noted that prediction has now fallen to 2 percent. 鈥淲e thought 2021 would be a slow recovery, but there was nothing slow about it,鈥 he said. 鈥淕rowth was 3-4 percent faster than normal. Hence the supply chain crisis, inflation and labor shortage. We weren't ready because we'd just come off a recession.鈥

Inflation is expected to come down, but it is unclear how fast, according to Kuehl. The biggest factor is energy costs, although wages are beginning to become a real issue, too, he said. On top of this, interest rates will go up this month, a likely quarter point rate increase as opposed to half a point.

Canada is seeing the same kind of ups and downs with GDP, Kuehl said, adding that Canada grows at about half a point faster than the U.S. The prospects for both, and Mexico, are positive for the next few months, he stated. 鈥淐orporate spending remains strong,鈥 said Kuehl. 鈥淣obody wants to be caught flat footed. Services will lead the consumer recovery in 2022 as it did in 2021. With goods, people have a lot of the things they need already because they bought them in 2020 when they had the money.鈥

Labor Shortage

鈥淭he media has bungled coverage of labor shortage, which is strange, because it鈥檚 really not that complicated,鈥 Kuehl said. 鈥淲e have been losing 10,000 Boomers a day from the workforce, after years of them not quitting. Plus, 7 million women left workforce during the pandemic.鈥

Job openings for manufacturing are at 858,000, which is still high, Kuehl said, but he pointed to the need for companies to offer more training. 鈥淚t's hard to find skilled workers,鈥 he said. 鈥淓veryone who comes into your industry comes in untrained, but small companies struggle to do training. Poaching from competitors happens as a result.鈥

Construction Forecast

鈥淭he commercial construction restart will depend on employees getting back into offices,鈥 said Kuehl. 鈥淭hose in manufacturing never stopped, but, CPAs, for example, are fine working from home.鈥 Commercial construction numbers were down, but now they are up almost 4 percent. The housing shortage may have some impacts as well. According to Kuehl, 70 percent of the country is short on housing. 鈥淢anufacturers are relocating from China or big American suburbs to smaller towns, but they need housing there,鈥 he said.

Manufacturing and warehousing construction will be two of the strongest sectors in 2022 but construction activity in general will accelerate and be strong, Kuehl said. 鈥淲ith manufacturing, we foresee a slight fade in 2022, but recovery will follow,鈥 he concluded.

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600450 Dr. Chris Kuehl Gives Economic Outlook in Uncertain Global Environment 黑料专区

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