Laffer's dire warning on inflation, US economy: 'Tipping into a slowdown'

Art Laffer says he is 'quite concerned about the next 12 months'

Former Reagan economist Art Laffer issued a dire warning for the U.S. economy, arguing on Monday that it is "tipping into a slowdown" and that a recession in 2023 is plausible. 

Laffer also argued that inflation is "not under control yet" and noted that he is "quite concerned about the next 12 months for the U.S. economy."

Laffer made the comments on "Mornings with Maria" on Monday, three days after it was revealed that a key measure of annual inflation that is closely watched by the Federal Reserve is running at the hottest pace in nearly four decades as widespread supply disruptions, extraordinarily high consumer demand and worker shortages fuel rapidly rising prices.

Prices soared by 5.8% in the year through December, according to the personal consumption expenditures price index data released Friday morning, beating out the previous month's increase of 5.7% to become the fastest inflation pace since 1982.

WHERE ARE SURGING CONSUMER PRICES HITTING AMERICANS THE HARDEST?

In the one-month period between November and December, prices jumped 0.4% (0.5% when excluding food and energy costs). 

Excluding the more-volatile measurements of food and energy, prices rose 4.9% in December from the previous year – the highest since September 1983. That measurement is the Fed's preferred gauge to track inflation; it marks the ninth consecutive month the measure has been above the central bank's target range of 2%. 

The inflation spike largely reflected surging energy costs, which rose 29.9% from a year ago, and food costs, which were up 5.7% over that same time period. Services inflation rose by 4.2% in December, and goods inflation increased 8.8% – up from the 8.5% pace a month prior, the data shows.

"I think we are at a really precarious position," Laffer told host Maria Bartiromo on Monday.  

"I think we might be tipping into a slowdown and if that happens, that would be really bad for the economy."

When speaking about inflation, he pointed to oil prices, noting that there has been "a very sharp rise" last month, following "a very sharp fall" the month before, "but the two together don’t show any improvement in inflation to my way of looking at it." 

"And we don’t have any basics coming in that could really do a good job; tax cuts, spending restraint, sound money, all of that is missing, so I am quite concerned about the next 12 months for the U.S. economy," he continued.

Last week, The Federal Reserve signaled it could "soon" raise interest rates for the first time in three years, paving the way for a March liftoff as policymakers seek to keep prices under control and combat the hottest inflation in nearly four decades. 

Although central bank officials have left rates unchanged since March 2020, they indicated broad support last week during a two-day, policy-setting meeting to begin aggressively normalizing policy, including raising rates amid growing concern over the rapid increase in consumer prices.

A rate increase would mark the first since December 2018. 

Markets have been volatile in anticipation of the rate hikes. For the month, all three of the major averages are down with the Nasdaq fairing the worst off 12%. 

Ticker Security Last Change Change %
I:DJI DOW JONES AVERAGES 43444.99 -305.87 -0.70%
SP500 S&P 500 5870.62 -78.55 -1.32%
I:COMP NASDAQ COMPOSITE INDEX 18680.120875 -427.53 -2.24%

Last Monday, co-founder and chief economist of Cornerstone Macro Nancy Lazar argued that a "significant global slowdown" and "a risk of a global recession" is plausible in 2023.

"We are a global economy, many companies are globally based, and the tightening cycle was already set to slow the economy here in 2023 and the Fed would obviously make it worse, but so would Russia, big time, and that’s why we raised the specter from the first time of a global recession possibly in 2023," Lazar said. "I hope not, but it is what it is."

Laffer agreed with Lazar on Monday, telling Bartiromo that the economist is "right on the money."

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Global tensions with Russia inching closer to Ukraine also contributed to the selling last week. A big catalyst came when President Biden announced he would hold a video call with European leaders over the escalating situation in the afternoon which sent stocks to the lows of the session. 

The end result: joint efforts to keep Russia and President Putin in check. 

Last week’s market volatility was also a result of investor jitters over the possibility of faster rising interest rates to combat inflation.

"I think the Fed is doing everything wrong," Laffer argued. "I think the only hope we really have of a good thing would be the elections in November."

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FOX Business’ Suzanne O’ Halloran and Megan Henney contributed to this report. 

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