Job gains strong, prices rising as U.S. recovery
continues -Fed Beige Book
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[July 15, 2021] WASHINGTON
(Reuters) -A strengthening U.S. economy was spinning off broad-based job
gains through early July that were particularly strong for lower-skilled
occupations, the Federal Reserve reported Wednesday in its latest Beige
Book compendium of reports about the economy.
But prices were also strong, rising "at an above-average pace," the Fed
said, with its business contacts apparently uncertain that higher
inflation would fade soon.
"While some contacts felt that pricing pressures were transitory, the
majority expected further increases in input costs and selling prices in
the coming months," the Fed reported in its Beige Book report of
anecdotes on economic conditions across the 12 regional reserve banks'
districts.
The report was released as Fed Chair Jerome Powell was in the middle of
the first of two days of semi-annual congressional testimony on the
economy and monetary policy.
Powell pledged to keep the Fed's "powerful support" in place to complete
the rebound from the coronavirus pandemic, but was peppered with pointed
questions about the current hot streak of inflation.
Overall, the U.S. economy in the period from late May through early July
was described in the Beige Book as displaying "moderate to robust
growth," marking the report's strongest overall characterization of the
national economy since early 2018.
But the report noted a heightened sense of concern among businesses that
the supply chain disruptions that have become a staple of the economy's
reopening from COVID-19-related shutdowns would persist for longer than
officials had predicted.
"The outlook for demand improved further, but many contacts expressed
uncertainty or pessimism over the easing of supply constraints," the
report said.
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A "Now Hiring" sign
advertising jobs at a hand car wash is seen along a street in Miami,
Florida, U.S. May 8, 2020. REUTERS/Marco Bello/File Photo
All 12 districts reported employment gains, with a quarter of them
characterizing the improvement in the labor market as "moderate or strong."
Wage growth was also widespread, with low-wage workers in particular seeing
above-average pay increases as companies scramble to fill a record number of
vacant jobs, and references to other perks such as bonuses were abundant across
districts. But a number of employers reported the draw of higher pay was not
bringing in job seekers.
"One Kentucky restaurant reported offering a starting wage of $16 per hour and
receiving no applicants," according to a report from the St. Louis Federal
Reserve, whose president - James Bullard - is among the more hawkish
policymakers.
Bullard, one of seven Fed officials to see interest rates needing to rise next
year, has posited that the coronavirus pandemic and other factors - such as a
booming stock market - may have changed the dynamics of labor supply, with some
workers choosing to retire, for instance, rather than go back to work.
The Beige Book is produced eight times a year, published two weeks ahead of the
conclusion of each meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee, the central
bank's policy-setting panel. The latest report was compiled by the Federal
Reserve Bank of Boston based on information collected by July 2.
The FOMC next meets on July 27-28 and is expected to continue the debate joined
at its June meeting over how much longer to keep its extraordinary support
measures for the economy in place in the face of higher-than-expected inflation.
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Andrea Ricci)
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