Oil: Will the Price Spike Tip the Economy into Recession?

The recent 30% surge in crude oil prices has led many observers—drawing on memories of past energy crises—to immediately warn of recession. That may ultimately prove correct, but we’re cautious about narrative-driven, back-of-the-envelope predictions. We prefer to ground our outlook on evidence, and that starts with understanding where the economy was headed before the oil shock hit.

High energy prices have historically had a much stronger impact on an economy that is already weakening than on one that is emerging from recession. Chart 1 shows our Pring Turner Leading Economic Index (PTLEI), a weighted composite of labor, consumer, housing, and financial indicators. It also drives our Recession Caller, shown in the middle panel. The Caller signals recession when it drops decisively below the red threshold under the equilibrium point—a method that has performed well since the 1950s. The major exception was 2020, when the artificially induced shutdown caused the indicator to lag sharply, as was the case with most models at the time. One indicator that did not lag was the OECD’s U.S. Leading Indicator, which had already peaked a couple of years earlier. It has led every recession since the 1950’s and is shown in the bottom panel.

Chart 1

Both indicators forecasted further growth prior to the oil shock.

By the end of February this year, the OECD LEI was clearly trending higher, suggesting the economy had enough underlying strength to absorb an oil shock of some size. Our own PT LEI is sending a similar message: its latest reading sits comfortably above the recession threshold, and the indicator recently broke out of its 2021–2024 trading range, another sign of improving momentum.

Rate of Change is More Important than Level

People often focus on the level of prices or interest rates, but in economics it’s usually the speed of change that causes the real trouble. If inflation edges up by a tenth of a percent a year, no one reacts—you can adjust wages, budgets, and expectations without stress. But if prices jump 2% in a single month, people rush to buy before things get worse, velocity rises, and the surge feeds on itself. Rapid shifts create uncertainty, and uncertainty is toxic for investment. It’s the difference between gradually easing up to highway speed and slamming the accelerator or hitting a wall.