A source for unbiased economic intelligence to help improve strategic decision-making.
What’s impacting labor market participation? Why are some sectors faring better than others? How do you separate the signal from the noise? KPMG Economics answers these questions and more, providing timely insight and analysis into the economic indicators. We monitor trends and identify potential opportunities that could impact your strategic objectives. Our perspectives look at both the short-term and long-term economic factors that are critical to guiding strategic decisions.
Global Navigator from KPMG Economics
Exorbitant privilege
Turning Points: 2025 Annual Outlook
Deregulation could partially offset the drag from tariffs.
The parental work disruption index: A new measure of the childcare crisis
Lack of access to childcare results in millions of lost work hours, which have downstream effects on productivity.
Global Navigator from KPMG Economics
Lights, camera, cut…interest rates
Global supply chain fragility: Five trends and their impact on the global economy
Expect disruptions to global supply chains to increase from several directions.
Groundhog day: Structural change watchlist
Structural shifts influence the contour and length of any given business cycle.
KPMG Economics distributes a wide selection of insight and analysis to help businesses make informed decisions.
Economic Coordinates
Explore analysis of key data indicators, such as job creation and the labor market, consumer spending, inflation, investment, housing and monetary policy. These combined data points are indicators of the overall health of the economy.
Inflation cools, consumers dip into savings
The data suggest that consumer spending will remain a driver of real GDP growth.
Hurricane repairs boost holiday spending
Replacement purchases after hurricanes and ahead of price hikes.
Household wealth grew in the third quarter of 2024
Incomes are rising faster than debts.
Fed plays whack-a-mole with inflation
The CPI data came in warm and mixed.
Employment rebounded in November
A December rate cut is a flip of a coin.
More job openings and turnover happening
Signs of stabilization and even resilience in the labor market.
Employment report will show a rebound
Look for robust gains in healthcare, among temps, government and hospitality jobs.
Job openings decline
Lower rates in 2025 will support the labor market.
Fed hesitantly cuts rates in December
Forecast for 2025 shows fewer rate cuts.
A hawkish cut in December
A dissent is possible at the FOMC meeting.
Fed cuts 1/4 point, no hint on December
Slow and careful.
No victory lap on inflation for the Fed
A sizable minority preferred only a quarter-point rate cut.
Multifamily construction plummets
Builders remain pessimistic.
Higher rates and prices hit new home sales
New home sales plunge as prices rise.
October housing construction dips
Builders laboring under labor shortages and high costs.
New home sales rise despite existing market slump
Housing could provide a tailwind for the economy in 2025.
Nearing the end of a sluggish year
Manufacturing is struggling in the face of sluggish global demand.
Trade deficit narrows after pre-tariff surge in imports
The economy looks like it expanded at a 3.0% pace in Q3.
Construction spending rose in autumn
Spending on public construction like roads and schools slumped.
Geopolitical uncertainties hurt durable goods orders
An indicator for business investment plans lost ground.
Loan demand weakens
There is reason for the Federal Reserve to further cut interest rates.
Bank lending is improving for consumers
Expect more rate cuts.
Bank lending standards ease in Q1
Nearly all banks cited less favorable or more uncertain outlooks for CRE.
US financial stability risks
Policy uncertainty remains a key concern for us.
Five key considerations as US faces port strike
45,000 dockworkers on the East Coast and Gulf Coast are poised to strike on October 1st unless a last-minute deal is brokered.
Latin America: Growth outlook hampered by sticky inflation
Inflation progress will slow.
Global Navigator from KPMG Economics
Central banks eye global soft-ish landing
Webcast
Register today for our December 12, 2024 Annual Economic Outlook with Chief Economist Diane Swonk
KPMG Economics distributes a wide selection of insight and analysis to help businesses make informed decisions.