White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow on Sunday insisted there is no recession on the horizon — as Democratic presidential hopeful Pete Buttigieg made the opposite prediction.

“I don’t see a recession at all,” Kudlow told fill-in host Dana Perino on “Fox News Sunday.”

Americans, he said, “should not be afraid of optimism,” saying the “Trump pro-growth program” is succeeding.

“What’s wrong with a little optimism?” Kudlow added

Meanwhile, on CNN’s “State of the Union,” Buttigieg was less confident.

“There’s a big debate going on right now over whether we’re on the cusp of a recession,” the South Bend, Indiana mayor said .

Directly before Buttigieg’s sit-down, White House trade adviser Peter Navarro had insisted to host Jake Tapper that the Trump administration’s tariffs on Chinese goods aren’t “hurting anybody here.”

But Buttigieg claimed they are.

“Despite all of the noise from that previous interview there’s some basic facts here that you can’t escape and one of them is American farmers are getting killed,” Buttigieg countered.

He said it’s a “fool’s errand to think you’re going to be able to get China to change the fundamentals of their economic model by poking them in the eye with some tariffs.”

A new NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll out Sunday found 49 percent of Americans support President Trump’s handling of the economy, versus 46 percent who disapprove.