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US Manufacturing Renaissance Thesis Remains Unfulfilled After 15 Years of Predictions

Forward Guidance · The Fed Is Losing Its Easing Bias While AI Props Up The Economy | Neil Dutta · May 13, 2026
US Manufacturing Renaissance Thesis Remains Unfulfilled After 15 Years of Predictions
Forward Guidance
Forward Guidance
The Fed Is Losing Its Easing Bias While AI Props Up The Economy | Neil Dutta
"Back in 2009, I worked at Merrill Lynch and we wrote a piece called The US Manufacturing Renaissance. That was back in 2009... And in the 10 years since then, if you just pull up a chart of manufacturing production, absolutely nothing has happened, right?"
Dutta disclosed that he authored a 2009 Merrill Lynch report predicting a US manufacturing renaissance based on dollar weakness and cost competitiveness. He noted that 15 years later, manufacturing production data shows virtually no improvement, challenging current narratives about reshoring and industrial policy success despite recent positive PMI readings.

About this episode

In this episode of Forward Guidance, host Felix interviews Renaissance Macro economist Neil Dutta about the state of the US economy amid rolling supply shocks and Fed policy uncertainty. The conversation, recorded May 12th following a hot inflation print, focused heavily on why traditional macro factors suddenly matter again as markets grapple with Fed hawkishness. Dutta argued that the recent CPI data matters less than oil market dynamics driven by Middle East conflict, noting that longer-term rates rose primarily due to energy shocks rather than inflation readings. The central thesis: with labor markets stable, inflation above target, and equities at highs, the Fed has no choice but to maintain a hawkish stance despite weak underlying consumer fundamentals. Dutta revealed that aggregate weekly payrolls have turned negative over three months, an unusual signal of household stress that contradicts surface-level strength. He warned that the largest capital expenditure boom in decades—driven by AI data center construction—will create a major macro crisis when it inevitably slows, as equity market gains and consumer spending are deeply intertwined with this buildout. On newly confirmed Fed Chair Kevin Warsh, Dutta was blunt: Warsh's attempt to advocate rate cuts via a Golden Age productivity thesis will fail because the data doesn't support it, IT prices are rising rather than falling unlike the 1990s, and Warsh lacks forecasting credibility with FOMC colleagues. Dutta also disclosed writing a 2009 manufacturing renaissance report that proved entirely wrong over 15 years, expressing skepticism about current reshoring narratives. He predicted brewing conflict between the Fed and White House as inflation pressures stem from executive policy rather than demand factors.

Key takeaways

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