ATA economist sees mixed trucking outlook

Updated Oct 19, 2011

At the American Trucking Associations’ annual meeting in Grapevine, Texas, ATA Chief Economist Bob Costello Oct. 17 said the outlook for trucking was muddled at best with the industry facing softening demand and rising costs, but added that capacity should continue to remain tight.

“Right now, freight demand is moving sideways, rather than falling off a cliff like it did in 2008,” Costello said during a panel moderated by business journalist Stuart Varney of Fox News and presented by Bendix Commercial Vehicle Systems. “That indicates to me that we might just skirt by another recession.”

Other panelists agreed the economy will avoid a double-dip recession. Mary Regalia, senior vice president of economic and tax policy and chief economist at the United States Chamber of Commerce, said growth slowed midyear due to flooding in Japan and uprisings in the Mideast, but the economy should accelerate back to between 2 and 2.5 percent growth.

In general, Costello said large fleets were seeing stronger volumes than smaller ones, likely because of their relationships to larger shippers. “No one is doing great, but it feels like larger companies and shippers are outperforming small businesses right now,” he said.

In addition, Costello said cost pressures on fleets were “significant,” with the inflation rate for items like fuel, equipment and driver wages exceeding the inflation rate for the broader economy.

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