While he recently acknowledged that his office had underestimated the impact on the economy of idling 800,000 federal workers, Hassett was upbeat about the outlook. "My thought is the negative effects we talked about from the shutdown will be very, very hard to see in the data," he said on CNBC. "I think Q1 has got to be well north of two and maybe even north of three" percent growth, given the momentum from employment.
And due to the stimulus provided by 2017's massive corporate tax cuts, the economy is seeing "a tax-induced supply shock" that will boost growth without increasing prices, he said. "So I think we could go forward with a great deal of confidence that the high growth isn't pushing an enormous amount on inflation." Hassett said he got a "fist bump" from President Donald Trump on Friday after the January employment report provided "good news the White House needed."