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Inventories Are Dragging On Growth

Inventories Are Dragging On Growth

March 24, 2023
Inventory accumulation swings from a positive for GDP growth in 2022 to a negative in 2023, helping to drag the overall economy into recession, says Oxford Economics.

Shortages have supported a wave of inventory rebuilding in the US this past year, according to Michael Pearce, lead economist at Oxford Economics, in a research briefing released on March 23, 2023. However with inventories above normal levels, Pearce, "expects a sharp downturn in stock accumulation, which is a downside risk to our forecast in H1 2023.

His analysis is as follows:

What matters for GDP growth is not just the change in inventories, but also the rate of change.  As the economy slows, firms usually switch from adding to stockpiles to reducing them. High interest rates raise the cost of keeping inventory, making stock building one of the most interest-rate sensitive and cyclical parts of GDP. In recessions since 1970, slower inventory accumulation on average has accounted for more than half of the peak-to-trough decline in output.

The unprecedented strains in supply chains in recent years mean inventories were unusually lean. The resulting wave of restocking is one reason why economic growth has continued to surprise to the upside. But inventory is no longer low relative to sales and – with the notable exception of the auto sector – inventories in many sectors now appear bloated. With sales growth slowing and interest rates rising further, we expect a sharp slowdown in inventory accumulation.

Our base case is that inventory accumulation swings from a positive for GDP growth in 2022 to a negative in 2023, helping to drag the overall economy into recession. The upside risk to that view is if firms continue to build inventories over coming years as a buffer against supply disruptions."

To read the full briefing click here.

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