Fed's Powell leaves kid gloves behind as he saddles up for Jackson Hole
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[August 25, 2022] (Reuters)
- Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell's
message on inflation and interest rates at this year's Jackson Hole
central banking conference in Wyoming will strike a tone entirely
different from the soothing one he used at the same event just one year
ago.
Back then, Powell used a series of charts to illustrate why he expected
price pressures to ease and believed a still-underemployed and
pandemic-battered nation needed continued support from the U.S. central
bank.
Fast forward to this week, and while Jackson Hole's majestic mountainous
backdrop remains the same, the economic landscape has changed: the
Powell-led Fed is battling high inflation with the sharpest set of
interest rate hikes in 40 years.
Powell is due to deliver his speech at 10 a.m. EDT (1400 GMT) on Friday.
Here's a walk through the data that served as the foundation for
Powell's thesis a year ago, and how things have evolved since then.
LABOR MARKETS
What Powell saw a year ago: U.S. employers were adding 832,000 jobs a
month, but the labor market still had "considerable remaining ground" to
reach the Fed's goal of maximum employment. The unemployment rate, at
5.4%, was "much too high" and even so understated the slack in the labor
market. "We also expect to see continued strong job creation," he said.
As it turned out: U.S. employers were hiring at a more moderate clip
than the data showed at the time, but strong job creation continued,
probably more so than Powell expected.
The gap to the level consistent with full employment closed quickly, in
part because rising COVID-19 cases didn't slow spending as much as
anticipated, and workers sidelined by the pandemic weren't rushing back
into the labor market.
The unemployment rate is now 3.5%, matching a 50-year low. But even that
figure perhaps understates how tight the labor market is. While most Fed
policymakers estimate full employment to be around 4.5%, "my own
instinct is that the natural rate of unemployment is higher," Powell
said last month.
INFLATION: CONFINED?
What Powell saw a year ago: Inflation appeared to be confined to "a
relatively narrow group of goods and services" affected by the pandemic
and the reopening of the economy, but broad-based measures of price
pressures looked moderate. "We would be concerned at signs that
inflationary pressures were spreading more broadly through the economy,"
he said.
As it turned out: They did spread. The Dallas Fed's trimmed mean
personal consumption expenditures inflation rate, one measure Powell
cited in last year's speech, was among several gauges of broad-based
inflation that shot up as price pressures spread from things like used
cars and home exercise equipment to a wide range of consumer goods and
services.
INFLATION: FASTEST-RISING PRICES ALREADY FALLING
What Powell saw a year ago: Prices were moderating in high-inflation
items like used cars. "It seems unlikely that durables inflation will
continue to contribute importantly over time to overall inflation," he
said. "Incoming data should provide more evidence that some of the
supply–demand imbalances are improving."
[to top of second column] |
Federal Reserve Board Chairman Jerome
Powell speaks during a news conference following a two-day meeting
of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) in Washington, U.S.,
July 27, 2022. REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz
As it turned out: Inflation in the durables category only receded recently,
having peaked later than anticipated in part because of persistent supply chain
troubles.
Meanwhile, services inflation is increasingly contributing to overall price
pressures, as people switch from buying goods to spending more on travel and
dining.
WAGES: NOT MUCH TO SEE HERE
What Powell saw a year ago: Data suggested "moderate" wage growth and "little
evidence of wage increases that might threaten excessive inflation," he said.
As it turned out: Pay rose sharply, with the broad-based measures of wage growth
that Powell pledged to monitor carefully jumping from only slightly above the
Fed's 2% inflation target to more than 5%. That's still short of overall
inflation, but the central bank may be less sanguine now than then about the
possibility of a 1970s-style wage price spiral.
INFLATION EXPECTATIONS: CONTAINED?
What Powell saw then: Households and businesses seemed to agree with his own
view that inflation would prove transitory - they didn't expect inflation in
five years or 10 years to be much higher than the Fed's 2% goal. That meant the
central bank could safely "look through" near-term inflation without worrying
that it would become embedded in the American psyche.
As it turned out: Long-term inflation expectations have risen, and that was one
reason the Fed got more aggressive in June with the first of two outsized
75-basis-point interest rate hikes.
GLOBAL INFLATION: BENIGN?
What Powell saw a year ago: Technology, globalization, aging populations and
central banks' determination not to let inflation get out of control had for
decades kept global inflation low, and there was little reason to think those
underlying trends "have suddenly reversed or abated," he said. Powell showed a
chart demonstrating low inflation across most advanced economies.
As it turned out: The picture changed.
And in the conference room where Powell will speak on Friday, global central
bankers who were responsible for keeping price pressures in check over the past
year will be watching every line on his charts.
(Reporting by Ann Saphir; Editing by Dan Burns and Paul Simao)
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