Policy Backgrounder: The Weekly Round-Up: Developments on the Economy (January 27, 2023)
Our Privacy Policy has been updated! The Conference Board uses cookies to improve our website, enhance your experience, and deliver relevant messages and offers about our products. Detailed information on the use of cookies on this site is provided in our cookie policy. For more information on how The Conference Board collects and uses personal data, please visit our privacy policy. By continuing to use this Site or by clicking "OK", you acknowledge our privacy policy and consent to the use of cookies.  Our Privacy Policy has been updated! Detailed information on the use of cookies on this site is provided in our cookie policy and our privacy policy. 
TCB Tourch
Loading...
  • logoImage
  •  
    • US
    • EUROPE
    • ASIA
  • 2

    Close
    • Insights
        • Insights
        • Explore by Center
          • Explore by Center
          • CED
            Committee for Economic Development

          • Economy, Strategy & Finance

          • Governance & Sustainability

          • Human Capital

          • Marketing & Communications

        • Explore by Content Type
          • Explore by Content Type
          • Reports

          • Upcoming Webcasts

          • On Demand Webcasts

          • Podcasts

          • Charts & Infographics

        • Trending Topics
          • Trending Topics
          • Artificial Intelligence (AI)

          • Navigating Washington

          • Geopolitics

          • US Economic Forecast

          • Sustainability

          • Future of Work

    • Events
        • Events
        • Upcoming Events
          • Upcoming Events
          • People First: Strategic Transformation

          • People First: Opportunity and Access

          • CHRO Summit: Navigating through a Tsunami of Change

          • Future: People Asia

          • Executive Compensation in a Disruptive World

          • CED Distinguished Leadership Awards Celebration

          • Explore all Upcoming Events

        • Member-Exclusive Programs
          • Member-Exclusive Programs
          • Center Briefings

          • Experts Live

          • Roundtables

          • Working Groups

          • Expert Briefings

    • Data
        • Data
        • Consumer Confidence Index

        • Data Central

        • TCB Benchmarking

        • Employment Trends Index

        • Global Economic Outlook

        • Leading Economic Indicators

        • Help Wanted OnLine

        • Labor Markets

        • Measure of CEO Confidence

        • Human Capital Benchmarking &
          Data Analytics

        • CMO+CCO Meter Dashboard

    • Centers
        • Centers
        • Our Centers
          • Our Centers
          • Committee for Economic Development

          • Economy, Strategy & Finance

          • Governance & Sustainability

          • Human Capital

          • Marketing & Communications

        • Center Membership
          • Center Membership
          • What Is a Center?

          • Benefits of Center Membership

          • Join a Center

    • Councils
        • Councils
        • Find a Council
          • Find a Council
          • Economy, Strategy & Finance

          • Governance & Sustainability

          • Human Capital

          • Marketing & Communications

        • Council Membership
          • Council Membership
          • What is a Council?

          • Benefits of Council Membership

          • Apply to a Council

    • Membership
        • Membership
        • Why Become a Member?
          • Why Become a Member?
          • Benefits of Membership

          • Check if Your Organization is a Member

          • Speak to a Membership Associate

        • Types of Membership
          • Types of Membership
          • Council

          • Committee for Economic Development

          • Economy, Strategy & Finance

          • Governance & Sustainability

          • Human Capital

          • Marketing & Communications

          • Insights

        • Already a Member?
          • Already a Member?
          • Sign In to myTCB®

          • Executive Communities

          • Member-Exclusive Programs

    • About Us
        • About Us
        • Who We Are
          • Who We Are
          • About Us

          • In the News

          • Press Releases

          • Our History

          • Support Our Work

          • Locations

          • Contact Us

        • Our Community
          • Our Community
          • Our Leadership

          • Our Experts

          • Trustees

          • Voting Members

          • Global Counsellors

          • Careers

          • This Week @ TCB

    • Careers
    • This Week @ TCB
    • Sign In to myTCB®
      • US
      • EUROPE
      • ASIA
    • Insights
      • Insights
      • Explore by Center
        • Explore by Center
        • CED
          Committee for Economic Development

        • Economy, Strategy & Finance

        • Governance & Sustainability

        • Human Capital

        • Marketing & Communications

      • Explore by Content Type
        • Explore by Content Type
        • Reports

        • Upcoming Webcasts

        • On Demand Webcasts

        • Podcasts

        • Charts & Infographics

      • Trending Topics
        • Trending Topics
        • Artificial Intelligence (AI)

        • Navigating Washington

        • Geopolitics

        • US Economic Forecast

        • Sustainability

        • Future of Work

    • Events
      • Events
      • Upcoming Events
        • Upcoming Events
        • People First: Strategic Transformation

        • People First: Opportunity and Access

        • CHRO Summit: Navigating through a Tsunami of Change

        • Future: People Asia

        • Executive Compensation in a Disruptive World

        • CED Distinguished Leadership Awards Celebration

        • Explore all Upcoming Events

      • Member-Exclusive Programs
        • Member-Exclusive Programs
        • Center Briefings

        • Experts Live

        • Roundtables

        • Working Groups

        • Expert Briefings

    • Data
      • Data
      • Consumer Confidence Index

      • Data Central

      • TCB Benchmarking

      • Employment Trends Index

      • Global Economic Outlook

      • Leading Economic Indicators

      • Help Wanted OnLine

      • Labor Markets

      • Measure of CEO Confidence

      • Human Capital Benchmarking & Data Analytics

      • CMO+CCO Meter Dashboard

    • Centers
      • Centers
      • Our Centers
        • Our Centers
        • Committee for Economic Development

        • Economy, Strategy & Finance

        • Governance & Sustainability

        • Human Capital

        • Marketing & Communications

      • Center Membership
        • Center Membership
        • What is a Center?

        • Benefits of Center Membership

        • Join a Center

    • Councils
      • Councils
      • Find a Council
        • Find a Council
        • Economy, Strategy & Finance

        • Governance & Sustainability

        • Human Capital

        • Marketing & Communications

      • Council Membership
        • Council Membership
        • What is a Council?

        • Benefits of Council Membership

        • Apply to a Council

    • Membership
      • Membership
      • Why Become a Member?
        • Why Become a Member?
        • Benefits of Membership

        • Check if Your Organization is a Member

        • Speak to a Membership Associate

      • Types of Membership
        • Types of Membership
        • Council

        • Committee for Economic Development

        • Economy, Strategy & Finance

        • Governance & Sustainability

        • Human Capital

        • Marketing & Communications

        • Insights

      • Already a Member?
        • Already a Member?
        • Sign In to myTCB®

        • Executive Communities

        • Member-Exclusive Programs

    • About Us
      • About Us
      • Who We Are
        • Who We Are
        • About Us

        • In the News

        • Press Releases

        • This Week @ TCB

        • Our History

        • Support Our Work

        • Locations

        • Contact Us

      • Our Community
        • Our Community
        • Our Leadership

        • Our Experts

        • Trustees

        • Voting Members

        • Global Counsellors

        • Careers

        • This Week @ TCB

    • Careers
    • Sign In to myTCB®
    • Download TCB Insights App
  • Insights
    Insights

    Our research and analysis have helped the world's leading companies navigate challenges and seize opportunities for over 100 years.

    Explore All Research

    Economic Indicators

    • Explore by Center
    • CED
      Committee for Economic Development
    • Economy, Strategy & Finance
    • Governance & Sustainability
    • Human Capital
    • Marketing & Communications
    • Explore by Content Type
    • Reports
    • Upcoming Webcasts
    • On Demand Webcasts
    • Podcasts
    • Charts & Infographics
    • Trending Topics
    • Artificial Intelligence (AI)
    • Navigating Washington
    • Geopolitics
    • US Economic Forecast
    • Sustainability
    • Future of Work
  • Events
    Events

    Our in-person and virtual events offer unmatched opportunities for professional development, featuring top experts and practitioners.

    See Everything Happening This Week

    Sponsor a Program

    • Upcoming Events
    • People First: Strategic Transformation

      May 15 - 16, 2025

      People First: Opportunity and Access

      June 12 - 13, 2025

      CHRO Summit: Navigating through a Tsunami of Change

      June 24, 2025

    •  
    • Future: People Asia

      September 04 - 05, 2025

      Executive Compensation in a Disruptive World

      September 16 - 17, 2025

      CED Distinguished Leadership Awards Celebration

      October 08, 2025

    • Member-Exclusive Programs
    • Center Briefings
    • Experts Live
    • Roundtables
    • Working Groups
    • Expert Briefings
    • Explore by Type
    • Events
    • Webcasts
    • Podcasts
    • Member-Exclusive Programs
    • Center Briefings
    • Experts Live
    • Roundtables
    • Working Groups
    • Expert Briefings
  • Data
    Corporate Disclosure Data

    TCB Benchmarking

    Real-time data & analytical tools to benchmark your governance, compensation, environmental, human capital management (HCM) and social practices against US public companies.

    Economic Data

    All Data

    See current direction and trends across key indicators

    Consumer Confidence Index

    US consumers' thoughts on the economy, jobs, finances and more

    Data Central

    One-stop, member-exclusive portal for the entire suite of indicators

    Labor Markets

    Covering all aspects of labor markets, from monthly development to long-term trends

    Measure of CEO Confidence

    Examines the health of the US economy from the perspective of CEOs

     

    Recession & Growth Trackers

    See the current and future state of 16 economies.

    Global Economic Outlook

    Track the latest short-, medium-, and long-term growth outlooks for 77 economies

    Leading Economic Indicators

    Track the state of the business cycle for 12 global economies across Asia and Europe

    Help Wanted OnLine

    Track the status of job markets across the US through online job listings

    Other Featured Data

    Human Capital Analytics Tools

    Tools to understand human capital management and corporate performance

    CMO+CCO Meter Dashboard

    Tracks the impact, resources, and satisfaction of CMOs and CCOs

  • Centers
    Centers

    Centers offer access to world-class experts, research, events, and senior executive communities.

    Our Centers
    • Committee for Economic Development
    • Economy, Strategy & Finance
    • Governance & Sustainability
    • Human Capital
    • Marketing & Communications
    Center Membership
    • What Is a Center?
    • Benefits of Center Membership
    • Join a Center
  • Councils
    Councils

    Councils are invitation-only, peer-led communities of senior executives that come together to exchange knowledge, accelerate career development, and advance their function.

    Find a Council
    • Economy, Strategy & Finance
    • Governance & Sustainability
    • Human Capital
    • Marketing & Communications
    Council Membership
    • What Is a Council?
    • Benefits of Council Membership
    • Apply to a Council
  • Membership
    Membership

    Membership in The Conference Board arms your team with an arsenal of knowledge, networks, and expertise that's unmatched in scope and depth.

    • Why Become a Member?
    • Benefits of Membership
    • Check if Your Organization is a Member
    • Speak to a Membership Associate
    • Types of Membership
    • Council
    • Committee for Economic Development
    • Economy, Strategy & Finance
    • Governance & Sustainability
    • Human Capital
    • Marketing & Communications
    • Insights
    • Already a Member?
    • Sign in to myTCB®
    • Executive Communities
    • Member-Exclusive Programs
  • About Us
    About Us

    The Conference Board is the global, nonprofit think tank and business membership organization that delivers Trusted Insights for What's Ahead®. For over 100 years, our cutting-edge research, data, events and executive networks have helped the world's leading companies understand the present and shape the future.

    Learn more about Membership

    • Who We Are
    • About Us
    • In the News
    • Press Releases
    • Our History
    • Support Our Work
    • Locations
    • Contact Us
    • Our Community
    • Our Leadership
    • Our Experts
    • Trustees
    • Voting Members
    • Careers
    • This Week @ TCB
Check if You're a Member
Create Account
Forgot Your Password?

Members of The Conference Board get exclusive access to the full range of products and services that deliver Trusted Insights for What's Ahead ® including webcasts, publications, data and analysis, plus discounts to conferences and events.

Navigating the Economic Storm

Policy Backgrounders

CED’s Policy Backgrounders provide timely insights on prominent business and economic policy issues facing the nation.

  • Email
  • Linkedin
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Copy Link

CED & ESF ECONOMIC & POLICY BRIEF

The Weekly Round-Up:

Developments on the Economy

January 27, 2023

 

This week CEOs and financial markets received mixed news about the US economy.

According to the Bureau of Economic Analysis’ advance estimate, real GDP expanded by 2.9 percent in Q4 2022. While this headline figure appears encouraging, trends in the underlying components are a cause for concern. For instance, while consumption expanded for the full quarter, monthly data show that real spending contracted in both November and December. Furthermore, The Conference Board’s Economy, Strategy, and Finance Center analysis notes that “anomalies in inventories and trade mask deeper softness in the economy”; it forecasts “that a mild recession is likely to begin in Q1 2023.”

This week, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen notified Congress that Treasury suspended reinvestment of the Government Securities Investment Fund of the Thrift Savings Fund. This was done as an “extraordinary measure” now that the US has reached its debt ceiling. These and other measures should keep the US from reaching the X date -- the date after which the US would not be able to pay any bills -- until some point in June. Yellen again called on Congress to take quick action to address the debt ceiling.

On Thursday, the Census Bureau released its advance report on durable goods manufacturers’ shipments, inventories, and orders. New orders rose sharply following a decline in November. The increase was largely driven by transportation equipment.

The Conference Board Leading Economic Index (LEI) for the US fell sharply again in December with widespread weakness among it components. There was widespread weakness among components of the leading indicator in December, indicating deteriorating conditions for labor markets, manufacturing, housing construction, and financial markets in the months ahead.

For more information on these and other events, please see below:

1. YELLEN TAKES ADDITIONAL “EXTRAORDINARY MEASURE” TO ADDRESS DEBT CEILING

2. McCARTHY, MANCHIN MEET ON DEBT CEILING

3. THE CONFERENCE BOARD LEADING ECONOMIC INDEX CONTINUES DECLINE

4. GDP RISES 2.9 PERCENT DESPITE GRADUAL SOFTENING

5. DURABLE GOODS ORDERS RISE SHARPLY IN DECEMBER

6. INITIAL UNEMPLOYMENT CLAIMS FALL

7. JUSTICE DEPARTMENT, EIGHT STATES SUE GOOGLE

8. HOUSE DELAYS VOTE ON IMMIGRATION BILL

9. NIST PREVIEWS NEW CYBERSECURITY FRAMEWORK

10. IRS BEGINS FILING SEASON

11. MONKEYPOX UPDATES

 

1. YELLEN TAKES ADDITIONAL “EXTRAORDINARY MEASURE” TO ADDRESS DEBT CEILING

On Tuesday, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen notified Congress that Treasury suspended reinvestment of the Government Securities Investment Fund (G Fund) of the Thrift Savings Fund available to Federal employees in interest-bearing US securities, which Treasury is permitted to do by statute as an “extraordinary measure” now that the US has reached its debt ceiling. The Fund “will be made whole once the debt limit is increased or suspended.” Taking these extraordinary measures should keep the US from reaching the X date -- the date after which the US would not be able to pay any bills -- until some point in June. Yellen again called on Congress to take quick action to address the debt ceiling.

2. McCARTHY, MANCHIN MEET ON DEBT CEILING

After a meeting with House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) on Wednesday, Senator Joe Manchin (D-WV) told reporters that McCarthy had agreed not to cut Social Security and Medicare in negotiations over the debt ceiling. Manchin has opposed cuts to the programs during the debt ceiling debate.

Recognizing the need for reform separate from the debt ceiling debate, Manchin in an interview this week on CNN’s “State of the Union,” called for a key change to help shore up Social Security’s ailing funds – raising the cap on payroll taxes that are used to fund the program. “The easiest and quickest thing that we can do is raise the cap,” he said, while also curbing “wasteful spending.”

3. THE CONFERENCE BOARD LEADING ECONOMIC INDEX CONTINUES DECLINE

The Conference Board Leading Economic Index® (LEI) for the US decreased by 1.0 percent in December 2022 to 110.5 (2016=100), following a decline of 1.1 percent in November. The LEI is now down 4.2 percent over the six-month period between June and December 2022 – a much steeper rate of decline than its 1.9 percent contraction over the previous six-month period (December 2021 - June 2022). “The US LEI fell sharply again in December – continuing to signal recession for the US economy in the near term,” said Ataman Ozyildirim, Senior Director, Economics, at The Conference Board. “There was widespread weakness among leading indicators in December, indicating deteriorating conditions for labor markets, manufacturing, housing construction, and financial markets in the months ahead. Meanwhile, the Coincident Economic Index (CEI) has not weakened in the same fashion as the LEI because labor market-related indicators (employment and personal income) remain robust. Nonetheless, industrial production – also a component of the CEI – fell for the third straight month. Overall economic activity is likely to turn negative in the coming quarters before picking up again in the final quarter of 2023.”

4.  GDP RISES 2.9 PERCENT DESPITE GRADUAL SOFTENING

Real GDP increased at an annual rate of 2.9 percent in the fourth quarter of 2022, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis’ advance estimate, reflecting weaker growth than in the third quarter (3.2 percent) despite declining inflation. Though headline growth was strong, the underlying components were quite mixed with the buildup of private inventories and government expenditures contributing 1.46 and 0.64 percentage points to overall fourth quarter growth. Final sales to private domestic purchasers, which excludes government, trade, and inventories, grew just 0.2 percent, the weakest number since the second quarter of 2020. Personal consumption expenditures rose 2.1 percent for the quarter, with goods consumption rising 1.1 percent following three consecutive quarterly declines, and services consumption continuing to rise (2.6 percent). However, declines in fixed investment (6.7 percent) offset much of that increase. Higher interest rates continued to weigh down residential investment, which declined 26.7 percent, following decreases of roughly 18 percent and 27 percent in the second and third quarters. Exports also fell slightly (1.3 percent) while imports declined (4.6 percent). The Conference Board’s Economy, Strategy, and Finance Center analysis notes that “anomalies in inventories and trade mask deeper softness in the economy”; it forecasts “that a mild recession is likely to begin in Q1 2023.”

5. DURABLE GOODS ORDERS RISE SHARPLY IN DECEMBER

On Thursday, the Census Bureau released its advance report on durable goods manufacturers’ shipments, inventories, and orders. New orders rose sharply by $15.3 billion, 5.6 percent, to $286.9 billion, following a decline of 1.7 percent in November. This resumed an upward trend. The increase was driven largely by transportation equipment, which rose $15.5 billion or 16.7 percent, to $108.1 billion. Excluding transportation, orders fell by 0.1 percent. Shipments of manufactured durable goods also rose $1.4 billion or 0.5 percent to $277.7 billion, similar to November’s 0.4 increase. Transportation equipment shipments, rising $1.5 billion to $93.8 billion, also drove this figure. Inventories rose $3.5 billion, or 0.7 percent, to $493.6 billion, the twenty-third consecutive monthly increase.

6. INITIAL UNEMPLOYMENT CLAIMS FALL

The Department of Labor reported Thursday that initial claims for unemployment insurance, a weekly indicator of labor market health, were 186,000 for the week ending January 21, a decrease of 6,000 from the previous week’s revised level of 192,000, following upward revisions of 2,000. The 4-week moving average was 197,500, its lowest mark since May 2022. This level of claims is low by historical standards and well below the highs of 261,000 in July, reflecting continued labor market strength even as some leading economic indicators tip into negative territory. The latest economic forecast from The Conference Board shows the unemployment rate rising to 4.5 percent, well above its current level of 3.5 percent, by the fourth quarter of 2023.

7. JUSTICE DEPARTMENT, EIGHT STATES SUE GOOGLE

The Justice Department and a bipartisan coalition of eight states (California, Colorado, Connecticut, New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island, Tennessee, and Virginia) filed an antitrust case against Google, charging that Google has used its dominant position in search advertising in a “systematic campaign” to “insert itself into all aspects of the digital advertising marketplace” to harm competitors and force publishers to use its products. The suit demands that Google divest many of its advertising technology products and undo “anticompetitive acquisitions,” including Google’s purchase of DoubleClick in 2008. The Justice Department also cited negative impacts on the Federal government as a purchaser of $100 million in digital advertising since 2019, providing an additional ground for the suit.

The suit quotes one Google employee asking, “Is there a deeper issue with us owning the platform, the exchange, and a huge network? The analogy would be if Goldman or Citibank owned the NYSE”; another manager was cited as saying “all or nothing – use [Google’s ad exchange] or don’t get access to our demand.” Google responded to the suit by accusing the Justice Department of an attempt “to pick winners and losers in the highly competitive advertising technology sector,” and noting that “[a]ntitrust cases shouldn’t penalize companies that offer popular, efficient services, particularly in difficult economic times. And they shouldn’t force companies to reverse 15-year-old investments that they have nurtured and worked hard to make successful, especially when those investments were already reviewed by regulators and allowed to proceed.” 

Any divestiture would have a strong financial impact on Google; revenues from the advertising products were $7.9 billion in the third quarter of 2022. Antitrust cases frequently move very slowly, and it would likely take years to litigate a divestiture. Some analysts noted in that a divestiture of Google’s advertising business, the separate company could still dominate the online advertising market. Beyond this lawsuit, Google also faces another suit on Google’s search results, which may come to trial this fall, as well as a lawsuit from ten states alleging similar charges relating to the advertising business, for which discovery will continue until 2024. The European Commission is also investigating Google’s advertising business.

8. HOUSE DELAYS VOTE ON IMMIGRATION BILL

A bill introduced by some House Republicans to curtail migration at the southern border was delayed from a potential floor vote this week and transferred instead to the House Homeland Security Committee. The plan, which GOP leadership had earlier listed as “ready-to-go” legislation, has sharply divided the new Republican majority. The bill would authorize the Secretary of Homeland Security to block any foreign citizen from entering the US if deemed "necessary in order to achieve operational control over [the southern] border." It also stipulated that the Secretary would be forced to take that action if, for any reason, agencies could not process undocumented migrants according to legal procedures. Failure to act would give state attorneys general the authority to sue the Federal government. Many moderates grew concerned about the bill’s provision preventing migrants and unaccompanied children from seeking asylum directly; those requesting asylum would be detained while their cases are being heard, a process that can take months. This controversy prompted the deal to move the bill to the committee rather than the fast-track Speaker Kevin McCarthy had earlier agreed to in negotiations. Internally, some House Republicans have expressed skepticism that bipartisan immigration legislation could clear the House in the new Congress, pointing to members who want to prioritize border security without compromise on other reforms. In an interview, Rep. Nancy Mace (R-SC) observed “It will never pass the Senate if we’re only talking border security.”

9. NIST PREVIEWS NEW CYBERSECURITY FRAMEWORK

The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) released a new concept paper previewing changes it expects to make to its Cybersecurity Framework (CSF), which it will style as CSF 2.0. This revised version comes after the agency solicited feedback to improve the framework last February. The CSF, previously known as the “Framework for Improving Critical Infrastructure Cybersecurity,” will be broadened in scope to cover a wider variety of institutions and firms. “Critical Infrastructure” refers to 16 sectors essential to the economy for which disruption would be particularly damaging. However, Congress recently directed NIST to write guidance for small business in a standalone bill -- a recommendation featured in CED’s Solutions Brief Securing Cyberspace in an Era of Evolving Threats -- and also for research institutions as part of the CHIPS and Science Act (Sec. 10228). Given these additional directives, NIST intends to ensure the CSF will benefit “organizations regardless of sector, type, or size.” Other goals for CSF 2.0 include relating CSF clearly to other NIST frameworks, such as its risk management or privacy frameworks, expanding guidance with implementation examples for CSF subcategories, expanding coverage of supply chain risk management (for example, for firms that use third-party cloud services) and facilitating international collaboration and engagement.

10. IRS BEGINS FILING SEASON

The 2023 tax filing season got underway, as the Administration hired 5,000 new customer service representatives, who will be helping customers no later than February 20, as part of the $80 billion in new funding for IRS modernization in the Inflation Reduction Act. Deputy Treasury Secretary Wally Adeyemo wrote that the IRS’ goals are for caller waiting times to be halved to 15 minutes and for 85 percent of callers to reach a human operator, instead of 15 percent last year. The President pledged to veto any attempt to repeal the IRS funding, terming the attempt “reckless.” The IRS also extended the comment period for issues related to its Taxpayer Burden Surveys for both individuals and businesses seeking information on “the current tax rules and regulations, the increased usage of tax preparation software, increased efficiency of such software, changes in tax preparation regulations, the increased use of electronic filing, the behavioral response of taxpayers to the tax system, the changing use of services, both IRS and external [.]” Comments on the surveys are due March 27.

11. MONKEYPOX UPDATES

As of January 25, the US has confirmed a total of 30,093 cases of monkeypox. States with the highest case numbers include California (5,719), New York (4,221), Texas (2,901), Florida (2,864) and Georgia (1,987). Globally, as of January 25, 85,142 cases have been confirmed, with 83,856 cases confirmed in locations that have not historically reported monkeypox. The countries with the highest case numbers include the US (30,093), Brazil (10,690), Spain (7,514), France (4,114), and Colombia (4,062). A total of 72 deaths have been reported in locations that have not historically reported monkeypox.

FDA released draft guidance for industry on “Mpox: Development of Drugs and Biological Products.” The guidance is intended to provide nonclinical, virology, and clinical considerations for mpox drug development programs. FDA’s guidance documents do not establish formal rules nor commit the agency to approving specific products and should instead be regarded as the Agency’s current thinking and be treated as recommendations. FDA is accepting comments on the guidance through March 21.

The Weekly Round-Up: Developments on the Economy (January 27, 2023)

January 27, 2023

CED & ESF ECONOMIC & POLICY BRIEF

The Weekly Round-Up:

Developments on the Economy

January 27, 2023

 

This week CEOs and financial markets received mixed news about the US economy.

According to the Bureau of Economic Analysis’ advance estimate, real GDP expanded by 2.9 percent in Q4 2022. While this headline figure appears encouraging, trends in the underlying components are a cause for concern. For instance, while consumption expanded for the full quarter, monthly data show that real spending contracted in both November and December. Furthermore, The Conference Board’s Economy, Strategy, and Finance Center analysis notes that “anomalies in inventories and trade mask deeper softness in the economy”; it forecasts “that a mild recession is likely to begin in Q1 2023.”

This week, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen notified Congress that Treasury suspended reinvestment of the Government Securities Investment Fund of the Thrift Savings Fund. This was done as an “extraordinary measure” now that the US has reached its debt ceiling. These and other measures should keep the US from reaching the X date -- the date after which the US would not be able to pay any bills -- until some point in June. Yellen again called on Congress to take quick action to address the debt ceiling.

On Thursday, the Census Bureau released its advance report on durable goods manufacturers’ shipments, inventories, and orders. New orders rose sharply following a decline in November. The increase was largely driven by transportation equipment.

The Conference Board Leading Economic Index (LEI) for the US fell sharply again in December with widespread weakness among it components. There was widespread weakness among components of the leading indicator in December, indicating deteriorating conditions for labor markets, manufacturing, housing construction, and financial markets in the months ahead.

For more information on these and other events, please see below:

1. YELLEN TAKES ADDITIONAL “EXTRAORDINARY MEASURE” TO ADDRESS DEBT CEILING

2. McCARTHY, MANCHIN MEET ON DEBT CEILING

3. THE CONFERENCE BOARD LEADING ECONOMIC INDEX CONTINUES DECLINE

4. GDP RISES 2.9 PERCENT DESPITE GRADUAL SOFTENING

5. DURABLE GOODS ORDERS RISE SHARPLY IN DECEMBER

6. INITIAL UNEMPLOYMENT CLAIMS FALL

7. JUSTICE DEPARTMENT, EIGHT STATES SUE GOOGLE

8. HOUSE DELAYS VOTE ON IMMIGRATION BILL

9. NIST PREVIEWS NEW CYBERSECURITY FRAMEWORK

10. IRS BEGINS FILING SEASON

11. MONKEYPOX UPDATES

 

1. YELLEN TAKES ADDITIONAL “EXTRAORDINARY MEASURE” TO ADDRESS DEBT CEILING

On Tuesday, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen notified Congress that Treasury suspended reinvestment of the Government Securities Investment Fund (G Fund) of the Thrift Savings Fund available to Federal employees in interest-bearing US securities, which Treasury is permitted to do by statute as an “extraordinary measure” now that the US has reached its debt ceiling. The Fund “will be made whole once the debt limit is increased or suspended.” Taking these extraordinary measures should keep the US from reaching the X date -- the date after which the US would not be able to pay any bills -- until some point in June. Yellen again called on Congress to take quick action to address the debt ceiling.

2. McCARTHY, MANCHIN MEET ON DEBT CEILING

After a meeting with House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) on Wednesday, Senator Joe Manchin (D-WV) told reporters that McCarthy had agreed not to cut Social Security and Medicare in negotiations over the debt ceiling. Manchin has opposed cuts to the programs during the debt ceiling debate.

Recognizing the need for reform separate from the debt ceiling debate, Manchin in an interview this week on CNN’s “State of the Union,” called for a key change to help shore up Social Security’s ailing funds – raising the cap on payroll taxes that are used to fund the program. “The easiest and quickest thing that we can do is raise the cap,” he said, while also curbing “wasteful spending.”

3. THE CONFERENCE BOARD LEADING ECONOMIC INDEX CONTINUES DECLINE

The Conference Board Leading Economic Index® (LEI) for the US decreased by 1.0 percent in December 2022 to 110.5 (2016=100), following a decline of 1.1 percent in November. The LEI is now down 4.2 percent over the six-month period between June and December 2022 – a much steeper rate of decline than its 1.9 percent contraction over the previous six-month period (December 2021 - June 2022). “The US LEI fell sharply again in December – continuing to signal recession for the US economy in the near term,” said Ataman Ozyildirim, Senior Director, Economics, at The Conference Board. “There was widespread weakness among leading indicators in December, indicating deteriorating conditions for labor markets, manufacturing, housing construction, and financial markets in the months ahead. Meanwhile, the Coincident Economic Index (CEI) has not weakened in the same fashion as the LEI because labor market-related indicators (employment and personal income) remain robust. Nonetheless, industrial production – also a component of the CEI – fell for the third straight month. Overall economic activity is likely to turn negative in the coming quarters before picking up again in the final quarter of 2023.”

4.  GDP RISES 2.9 PERCENT DESPITE GRADUAL SOFTENING

Real GDP increased at an annual rate of 2.9 percent in the fourth quarter of 2022, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis’ advance estimate, reflecting weaker growth than in the third quarter (3.2 percent) despite declining inflation. Though headline growth was strong, the underlying components were quite mixed with the buildup of private inventories and government expenditures contributing 1.46 and 0.64 percentage points to overall fourth quarter growth. Final sales to private domestic purchasers, which excludes government, trade, and inventories, grew just 0.2 percent, the weakest number since the second quarter of 2020. Personal consumption expenditures rose 2.1 percent for the quarter, with goods consumption rising 1.1 percent following three consecutive quarterly declines, and services consumption continuing to rise (2.6 percent). However, declines in fixed investment (6.7 percent) offset much of that increase. Higher interest rates continued to weigh down residential investment, which declined 26.7 percent, following decreases of roughly 18 percent and 27 percent in the second and third quarters. Exports also fell slightly (1.3 percent) while imports declined (4.6 percent). The Conference Board’s Economy, Strategy, and Finance Center analysis notes that “anomalies in inventories and trade mask deeper softness in the economy”; it forecasts “that a mild recession is likely to begin in Q1 2023.”

5. DURABLE GOODS ORDERS RISE SHARPLY IN DECEMBER

On Thursday, the Census Bureau released its advance report on durable goods manufacturers’ shipments, inventories, and orders. New orders rose sharply by $15.3 billion, 5.6 percent, to $286.9 billion, following a decline of 1.7 percent in November. This resumed an upward trend. The increase was driven largely by transportation equipment, which rose $15.5 billion or 16.7 percent, to $108.1 billion. Excluding transportation, orders fell by 0.1 percent. Shipments of manufactured durable goods also rose $1.4 billion or 0.5 percent to $277.7 billion, similar to November’s 0.4 increase. Transportation equipment shipments, rising $1.5 billion to $93.8 billion, also drove this figure. Inventories rose $3.5 billion, or 0.7 percent, to $493.6 billion, the twenty-third consecutive monthly increase.

6. INITIAL UNEMPLOYMENT CLAIMS FALL

The Department of Labor reported Thursday that initial claims for unemployment insurance, a weekly indicator of labor market health, were 186,000 for the week ending January 21, a decrease of 6,000 from the previous week’s revised level of 192,000, following upward revisions of 2,000. The 4-week moving average was 197,500, its lowest mark since May 2022. This level of claims is low by historical standards and well below the highs of 261,000 in July, reflecting continued labor market strength even as some leading economic indicators tip into negative territory. The latest economic forecast from The Conference Board shows the unemployment rate rising to 4.5 percent, well above its current level of 3.5 percent, by the fourth quarter of 2023.

7. JUSTICE DEPARTMENT, EIGHT STATES SUE GOOGLE

The Justice Department and a bipartisan coalition of eight states (California, Colorado, Connecticut, New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island, Tennessee, and Virginia) filed an antitrust case against Google, charging that Google has used its dominant position in search advertising in a “systematic campaign” to “insert itself into all aspects of the digital advertising marketplace” to harm competitors and force publishers to use its products. The suit demands that Google divest many of its advertising technology products and undo “anticompetitive acquisitions,” including Google’s purchase of DoubleClick in 2008. The Justice Department also cited negative impacts on the Federal government as a purchaser of $100 million in digital advertising since 2019, providing an additional ground for the suit.

The suit quotes one Google employee asking, “Is there a deeper issue with us owning the platform, the exchange, and a huge network? The analogy would be if Goldman or Citibank owned the NYSE”; another manager was cited as saying “all or nothing – use [Google’s ad exchange] or don’t get access to our demand.” Google responded to the suit by accusing the Justice Department of an attempt “to pick winners and losers in the highly competitive advertising technology sector,” and noting that “[a]ntitrust cases shouldn’t penalize companies that offer popular, efficient services, particularly in difficult economic times. And they shouldn’t force companies to reverse 15-year-old investments that they have nurtured and worked hard to make successful, especially when those investments were already reviewed by regulators and allowed to proceed.” 

Any divestiture would have a strong financial impact on Google; revenues from the advertising products were $7.9 billion in the third quarter of 2022. Antitrust cases frequently move very slowly, and it would likely take years to litigate a divestiture. Some analysts noted in that a divestiture of Google’s advertising business, the separate company could still dominate the online advertising market. Beyond this lawsuit, Google also faces another suit on Google’s search results, which may come to trial this fall, as well as a lawsuit from ten states alleging similar charges relating to the advertising business, for which discovery will continue until 2024. The European Commission is also investigating Google’s advertising business.

8. HOUSE DELAYS VOTE ON IMMIGRATION BILL

A bill introduced by some House Republicans to curtail migration at the southern border was delayed from a potential floor vote this week and transferred instead to the House Homeland Security Committee. The plan, which GOP leadership had earlier listed as “ready-to-go” legislation, has sharply divided the new Republican majority. The bill would authorize the Secretary of Homeland Security to block any foreign citizen from entering the US if deemed "necessary in order to achieve operational control over [the southern] border." It also stipulated that the Secretary would be forced to take that action if, for any reason, agencies could not process undocumented migrants according to legal procedures. Failure to act would give state attorneys general the authority to sue the Federal government. Many moderates grew concerned about the bill’s provision preventing migrants and unaccompanied children from seeking asylum directly; those requesting asylum would be detained while their cases are being heard, a process that can take months. This controversy prompted the deal to move the bill to the committee rather than the fast-track Speaker Kevin McCarthy had earlier agreed to in negotiations. Internally, some House Republicans have expressed skepticism that bipartisan immigration legislation could clear the House in the new Congress, pointing to members who want to prioritize border security without compromise on other reforms. In an interview, Rep. Nancy Mace (R-SC) observed “It will never pass the Senate if we’re only talking border security.”

9. NIST PREVIEWS NEW CYBERSECURITY FRAMEWORK

The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) released a new concept paper previewing changes it expects to make to its Cybersecurity Framework (CSF), which it will style as CSF 2.0. This revised version comes after the agency solicited feedback to improve the framework last February. The CSF, previously known as the “Framework for Improving Critical Infrastructure Cybersecurity,” will be broadened in scope to cover a wider variety of institutions and firms. “Critical Infrastructure” refers to 16 sectors essential to the economy for which disruption would be particularly damaging. However, Congress recently directed NIST to write guidance for small business in a standalone bill -- a recommendation featured in CED’s Solutions Brief Securing Cyberspace in an Era of Evolving Threats -- and also for research institutions as part of the CHIPS and Science Act (Sec. 10228). Given these additional directives, NIST intends to ensure the CSF will benefit “organizations regardless of sector, type, or size.” Other goals for CSF 2.0 include relating CSF clearly to other NIST frameworks, such as its risk management or privacy frameworks, expanding guidance with implementation examples for CSF subcategories, expanding coverage of supply chain risk management (for example, for firms that use third-party cloud services) and facilitating international collaboration and engagement.

10. IRS BEGINS FILING SEASON

The 2023 tax filing season got underway, as the Administration hired 5,000 new customer service representatives, who will be helping customers no later than February 20, as part of the $80 billion in new funding for IRS modernization in the Inflation Reduction Act. Deputy Treasury Secretary Wally Adeyemo wrote that the IRS’ goals are for caller waiting times to be halved to 15 minutes and for 85 percent of callers to reach a human operator, instead of 15 percent last year. The President pledged to veto any attempt to repeal the IRS funding, terming the attempt “reckless.” The IRS also extended the comment period for issues related to its Taxpayer Burden Surveys for both individuals and businesses seeking information on “the current tax rules and regulations, the increased usage of tax preparation software, increased efficiency of such software, changes in tax preparation regulations, the increased use of electronic filing, the behavioral response of taxpayers to the tax system, the changing use of services, both IRS and external [.]” Comments on the surveys are due March 27.

11. MONKEYPOX UPDATES

As of January 25, the US has confirmed a total of 30,093 cases of monkeypox. States with the highest case numbers include California (5,719), New York (4,221), Texas (2,901), Florida (2,864) and Georgia (1,987). Globally, as of January 25, 85,142 cases have been confirmed, with 83,856 cases confirmed in locations that have not historically reported monkeypox. The countries with the highest case numbers include the US (30,093), Brazil (10,690), Spain (7,514), France (4,114), and Colombia (4,062). A total of 72 deaths have been reported in locations that have not historically reported monkeypox.

FDA released draft guidance for industry on “Mpox: Development of Drugs and Biological Products.” The guidance is intended to provide nonclinical, virology, and clinical considerations for mpox drug development programs. FDA’s guidance documents do not establish formal rules nor commit the agency to approving specific products and should instead be regarded as the Agency’s current thinking and be treated as recommendations. FDA is accepting comments on the guidance through March 21.

Download Article
Great News!

You already have an account with The Conference Board.

Please try to login in with your email or click here if you have forgotten your password.

  • Download
  • Download Article
search Icon
Newest First
search Icon
search Icon
filterMobImage
Analyzing the US-Ukraine Minerals Deal
Analyzing the US-Ukraine Minerals Deal

May 08, 2025

Reauthorization of the Defense Production Act
Reauthorization of the Defense Production Act

May 02, 2025

The Next One Hundred Days – and Beyond: What Lies Ahead
The Next One Hundred Days – and Beyond: What Lies Ahead

April 29, 2025

Congress Agrees to Budget Resolution to Unlock Reconciliation
Congress Agrees to Budget Resolution to Unlock Reconciliation

April 16, 2025

Showerheads—and the Future of Regulation
Showerheads—and the Future of Regulation

April 16, 2025

US Tariff Shift: Key Implications and Considerations
US Tariff Shift: Key Implications and Considerations

April 11, 2025

US Spring Plantings Respond to Tariffs and Geopolitical Risk
US Spring Plantings Respond to Tariffs and Geopolitical Risk

April 09, 2025

Attempt to Shift Power: Changes to Federal Election Administration
Attempt to Shift Power: Changes to Federal Election Administration

April 04, 2025

CBO View: Tax Bill, Debt Ceiling, and Long-Term Projections
CBO View: Tax Bill, Debt Ceiling, and Long-Term Projections

April 03, 2025

View Less View More

Publications

Economy Watch: European View (May 2024)

Economy Watch: European View (May 2024)

May 21, 2024 | Article

Economy Watch: US View (May 2024)

Economy Watch: US View (May 2024)

May 21, 2024 | Article

The Administration’s FY25 Revenue Proposals

The Administration’s FY25 Revenue Proposals

May 02, 2024 | Article

US Consumers Souring on High-Tech Goods but Sweet on High-Tech Services

US Consumers Souring on High-Tech Goods but Sweet on High-Tech Services

April 30, 2024 | Report

Growth Above Expectation in Q1 but Slowing in March

Growth Above Expectation in Q1 but Slowing in March

April 30, 2024 | Report

National Security Supplemental Funding

National Security Supplemental Funding

April 25, 2024 | Article

View Less View More

On Demand Webcasts, Podcasts and Videos

C-Suite Perspectives

Can Social Security Be Reformed?

April 01, 2024

Window on China: Outlook for 2024

January 25, 2024 09:00 AM CET (Brussels), 04:00 PM SGT (Singapore)

C-Suite Perspectives

The State of the Global Economy for September 2023

September 26, 2023

C-Suite Perspectives

How an Expansion of BRICS Could Change Global Business

September 18, 2023

China's evolving data security regulatory framework

China's evolving data security regulatory framework

September 14, 2023 03:00 AM ET (New York), 09:00 AM CET (Brussels), 03:00 PM SGT (Singapore)

C-Suite Perspectives

Is Hybrid Work Here to Stay?

September 05, 2023

View Less View More

Press Releases / In the News

PRESS RELEASE

Survey: In 2024, CEOs Are Most Worried About a Recession & Inflation, But S…

January 10, 2024

PRESS RELEASE

As Labor Day Approaches, HR Leaders Say Hiring

August 29, 2023

IN THE NEWS

CEOs Are Predicting a Mild Recession in the U.S.

June 01, 2023

PRESS RELEASE

Global Productivity Growth Set to Disappoint Again in 2023

May 17, 2023

IN THE NEWS

Dana Peterson on Why Recession is Likely in 2023

April 20, 2023

PRESS RELEASE

Which Industries Will Start Shedding Jobs?

April 05, 2023

View Less View More
  • Tags
  • Global Recession - Policy
  • Navigating the Economic Storm
EVENT PORTAL

Forgot Password | Resend account confirmation

Conference Board Sample Web Chat
chatbot-Icon TCB Logo
chatbot-Icon
Navigating Washington - Sign up to receive the latest business insights related to executive orders, new laws, and changing regulations.
ABOUT US
  • Who We Are
  • Annual Report
  • Our History
  • Our Experts
  • Our Leadership
  • In the News
  • Press Releases
MEMBERSHIP
  • Become a Member
  • Sign In to myTCB®
  • Access Experts
  • Member-Only Events
  • Data & Benchmarking
  • Manage Account
EXPLORE
  • Centers
  • Councils
  • Latest Research
  • Events
  • Webcasts
  • Podcasts
  • This Week @ TCB
CONTACT US
  • Americas
    +1 212 759 0900
    customer.service@tcb.org
  • Europe/Africa/Middle East
    +32 2 675 5405
    brussels@tcb.org
  • Asia
    Hong Kong | +852 2804 1000
    Singapore | +65 8298 3403
    service.ap@tcb.org
CAREERS
  • See Open Positions
Terms Of Use | Privacy Policy | Event Code of Conduct | Trademarks
© 2025 The Conference Board Inc. All rights reserved. The Conference Board and torch logo are registered trademarks of The Conference Board.
The use of all The Conference Board data and materials is subject to the Terms of Use. Reprint requests are reviewed individually and may be subject to additional fees.The Conference Board reserves the right to deny any request.
Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Event Code of Conduct | Trademarks
© 2025 The Conference Board Inc. All rights reserved. The Conference Board and torch logo are registered trademarks of The Conference Board.
The use of all data from The Conference Board data and materials is subject to the Terms of Use. Reprint requests are reviewed individually and may be subject to additional fees.The Conference Board reserves the right to deny any request.

Thank you for signing up. You will now receive CEO Insights for What's Ahead every Wednesday morning. You can unsubscribe at any time or manage your preferences to receive more content from The Conference Board.

Announcing The Conference Board AI Virtual Conference Series

Explore the Impact of AI on Your Business

Members receive complimentary registration - Learn more >>

SORT BY

  • Newest First
  • Oldest First