More than 40% of manufacturers in Minnesota expect a recession next year.
That's what Enterprise Minnesota found in its annual survey, administered in August and September. Last year, only 18% expected a recession.
The worry about a recession might be even higher now than when the survey was completed, said Bob Kill, CEO of Enterprise Minnesota. Since then the Federal Reserve has hiked interest rates twice and recession fears have grown.
"The continued threat of inflation combined with wage inflation as a key part of it ... is different even from six to eight weeks ago," Kill said.
Ernie Goss, an economics professor at Creighton University who leads monthly surveys of supply managers in manufacturing and banking in the Midwest, said Mid-America Business Conditions Index results show that business sentiment for the next six months has gotten progressively worse since July.
"Manufacturers and the bankers are both saying [the outlook] is getting worse," Goss said. "Since mid-July it began getting more negative each month."
In September, 55.6% of Creighton's respondents thought the economy would contract; a month later, that sentiment had grown to 63%.
"That was the worst number we've gotten since the pandemic began," Goss said.