From the front of the business section of today's New York Times (January 6, 2023):
a budding crop of economists and major market investors see a firm chance that the economy will avoid a recession, or scrape by with a brief stall in growth, as cooled consumer spending and the easing of pandemic-era disruptions help inflation gingerly trend toward more tolerable levels — a hopeful outcome widely called a soft landing.
"The possibility of getting a soft landing is greater than the market believes," said Jason Draho, an economist and the head of Americas asset allocation for UBS Global Wealth Management. "Inflation has now come down faster than some recently expected, and the labor market has held up better than expected."...
"It's 50-50, but I have to take a side, right? So I take the side of no recession," said Mark Zandi, the chief economist at Moody's Analytics. "I can make the case on either side of this pretty easily, but I think with a little bit of luck and some tough policymaking, we can make our way through."