US keeps defying the recession odds
Steady consumption has helped economic growth plod along at an unspectacular but solid 2 per cent.

But despite all the pieces that seem to be in place for a recession, it hasn’t happened. This expansion is now the longest in postwar history, having recently surpassed the long boom of the 1990s. Unemployment remains low and the prime-age employment-population ratio — a better indicator of labor-market strength — continues to increase.
And despite paying the full cost of the tariffs, the US consumer — the traditional engine of global economic strength in earlier decades — has held up.
Steady consumption has helped economic growth plod along at an unspectacular but solid 2 per cent. In stark contrast to 2008, the US has held up better than other countries -- the proverbial best house in a bad neighborhood.
But there are signs that 2020 may be a different story. Business investment, for example, has begun to fall.
Large companies have been cutting back on capital expenditures, many of them citing policy uncertainty and the trade war as their reasons for doing so (though October data looked better).
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