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Only geopolitics can sink the US into recession, Blackstone’s Schwarzman says

People impel retail shopping bags during Black Friday events on November 25, 2016 in New York City.

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The U.S. restraint is actually looking “quite robust” thanks to a healthy labor market and higher consumer spending, Steve Schwarzman, the co-founder, chairman and CEO of Blackstone Number, told CNBC Monday.

A slew of disappointing economic data last week suggested the ongoing U.S.-China buying war was starting to take its toll, fueling concerns of a possible recession. On Tuesday, a gauge of U.S. manufacturing showed the lowest know in more than 10 years for September.

But Schwarzman noted that manufacturing accounts for about 11% of the U.S. thriftiness. “The U.S. consumer is around 70%, maybe even a little more, of the U.S. economy …. (and) the 70% is doing quite well enough,” he told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe” Monday.

“Why is that? Because we have full employment in the U.S. — 3.5% unemployment it’s the scantiest since 1969 — that’s pretty amazing. This shortage of labor is starting to create higher wages for proletarians …. (and) what people are doing with that money is they’re spending it. So, we have 70% of the economy that is thoroughly robust. The only thing, I think, that’s going to disturb that is some kind of geopolitical problem,” Schwarzman rumoured.

“I don’t see a normal business cycle taking the U.S. into a recession,” he added.

Consumer spending rose a meager 0.1% in August from the preceding month, according to data from the U.S. Commerce Department in September. The U.S. then slapped a 15% tariff on around $112 billion of Chinese consumer goods in September.  J.P. Morgan guessed that the new tariffs, alongside those due in mid-December, will cost the average U.S. family $1,000 a year.

However, touches over a possible slowdown were eased Friday following U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data that manifested that the economy added 136,000 jobs in September.

Although economists polled by Dow Jones expected an increase of 145,000 farm outs, market sentiment was buoyed by the unemployment rate falling to 3.5%, a 50-year low.

Nonetheless, the average hourly earnings were unchanged month on month — although across the last 12 months, average hourly earnings have increased 2.9%, the Bureau of Labor Statistics acclaimed.

China-US trade talks

Giving his judgment on the fractious state of trade talks, Schwarzman said the U.S. “is asking China to exchange.”

“China was a lesser-developed country. It had GDP (gross domestic product) per capita, 40 years ago, of a few hundred dollars a person. It’s now $10,000 per myself. It’s the greatest economic miracle perhaps in world history,” he said.

Schwarzman noted that China had become economically moneymaking, at least in part, by “staying behind big tariff walls, taxes, closed markets or selectively open markets, guidance subsidies, seizing intellectual capital — a variety of things we don’t do in the West, in the developed world.”

“The U.S. has called it now saying ‘we want coppers’, and there are many in China that say that’s OK, but there are others that don’t want to change. So, we have three interests at the table, we have the U.S., the Chinese reformers and the Chinese hardliners. We’re going to find out this week what the Chinese disposes are and then the U.S. will have a chance to take a look at it,’ he said.

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