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PM Chartbook

Charting the Business Cycle With Richard Clarida

Former Federal Reserve Vice Chair Richard Clarida shares three charts highlighting possible macro inflection points in the business cycle: from growth and inflation to debt and labor.

Macro instability drives consensus views on weaker growth, higher inflation

Policy choices are roiling markets and shaking confidence among consumers and businesses.

The consensus outlook for G-10 developed economies has shifted sharply toward lower growth—or even contraction—amid significant inflationary pressure.

Is a widespread bout of stagflation on the horizon? And how can central banks manage the competing risks to growth, employment, and price stability?

Consensus Growth vs. Inflation

Chart 1: Economic chart showing macro instability with G10 inflation and GDP growth consensus from March 2023 to April 2025.
Data as of April 2025. Source: Bloomberg, PIMCO. Bloomberg consensus is the average of surveyed participants on their forecasts for G10 GDP Annual (YoY%) and G10 CPI Inflation (YoY%).

Foreign investors’ share of U.S. debt could decline further

To compound stagflation concerns, U.S. Treasury issues have not been absorbed at the same pace by foreign investors since 2014.

This long-term trend could be further exacerbated by countries that face recent tariff announcements while holding large amounts of Treasuries—uncertainty could subject foreign investors to further slow or cease buying Treasuries.

Foreign Holdings of U.S. Treasury Securities as a Share of Outstanding Public Debt

Chart 2: Economic chart showing foreign investors' share of U.S. debt and recession periods from 1970 to 2020.
Data as of April 2025. Source: Haver Analytics, Bloomberg, US Treasury, Federal Reserve, PIMCO. Refer to Appendix for additional outlook and risk information.

U.S. labor productivity appears resilient amid stagflationary pressure

Even so, unlike the stagflation period of the 1970s that saw a large drop in U.S. labor productivity partly attributed to the energy crisis, U.S. labor productivity has held up fairly well.

Looking ahead, productive labor markets could help balance—to some degree—the inflationary pressures and trade-related uncertainty likely to hinder U.S. economic growth and activity.

U.S. Labor Output Per Hour Growth

Chart 3: Economic chart showing U.S. labor productivity growth with 5-year and 10-year moving averages from June 1957 to April 2025.
Data as of January 2025. Source: Bloomberg, BLS, PIMCO. Past performance is not a guarantee or a reliable indicator of future results.

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