The pandemic broke the Fed's model; this week may show how much
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[June 14, 2022] By
Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Federal Reserve
Chair Jerome Powell used his first four years as the world's top central
banker to reshape U.S. monetary policy around the idea that low
inflation and low unemployment could coexist.
It was a move intended to spread the gains of economic growth more
widely and keep a focus on jobs during the rebound from the pandemic.
But the assumptions on which it rested - a relatively frictionless
global economy with a well-greased supply chain; a balanced U.S. labor
market with just over one open job for each unemployed person - have
been shattered by events that appear to have put the Fed's two goals of
full employment and moderate inflation back in opposition.
Graphic: There and back again: Fed views of 2022 - https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-FED/SEPS/gdpzyexqmvw/chart.png
Unemployment today at 3.6% is more akin to the 1950s and 1960s, with
workers exercising leverage to negotiate higher wages and, given the
pandemic, better working conditions. Inflation, however, is soaring at
more than 8% annually, leaving Fed officials at a crossroads over how to
tame it and facing the possibility that their "narrow path" back to the
pre-pandemic world of low unemployment and low inflation may have all
but closed.
Fed officials are expected to raise interest rates for a third time this
year on Wednesday, with a half-percentage point increase seen as the
likely outcome along with signals for more as long as inflation keeps
far overshooting their 2% target. In new projections, they will also
provide their sense of what's at risk, and what price the economy could
pay through slowing growth and higher unemployment to get inflation back
into line.
A HEYDAY FOR JOBS
Arguably Powell's approach did what was intended in the labor market.
The employment rebound has been faster than many expected at the
pandemic's outset.
Distributionally, it has also helped, consistent with the Fed's view of
maximum employment as something "broad and inclusive." Wages have risen
fastest for lower-paid occupations; more Blacks and Hispanics are
employed than before the pandemic, while white employment in May
remained 1.6 million below February 2020's peak.
Graphic: Minority employment surges - https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-FED/POWELL/akpezrdkbvr/chart.png
Back in March, Fed officials saw inflation receding with no unemployment
rate increase, but "we're going to see some cracks" in that story in the
new projections, predicted Nomura senior U.S. economist Robert Dent. The
median projected unemployment rate may just rise a couple of tenths of a
percentage point in coming years, as Fed officials hang onto their view
of an economy that may still revert to pre-pandemic form.
But "it is a tightrope...It would not be hard at all to see the economy
tip into recession," with joblessness rising to 5% or higher, he said.
Some Fed officials have started opening the door to unemployment rates
above 4%, the level policymakers roughly consider full employment.
That's likely to fall hardest on Black and Hispanic workers, whose
unemployment rates typically rise faster in downturns.
[to top of second column] |
U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell testifies during the
Senate Banking Committee hearing titled "The Semiannual Monetary
Policy Report to the Congress", in Washington, U.S., March 3, 2022.
Tom Williams/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo
THE SAVINGS STOCKPILE
One unexpected outcome of the pandemic was a federal government response so
strong that household incomes rose despite a recession. Some now argue the
spending, in early 2021 in particular, left the economy with much more consumer
demand than it can meet, adding to inflation.
But it also offset what would have likely been rising poverty, hunger and
homelessness. A lot of it, moreover, remains in household bank accounts. Data
last week showed that through the end of March cash and checking deposits
continued rising, to $4.4 trillion - more than triple the pre-pandemic level.
Graphic: Households cash buffers spike - https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-FED/POWELL/gkvlgzrnapb/chart.png
That also provided a buffer: In a recent Fed household survey respondents said
they are in the best financial shape ever.
But, to some degree, it may have to be spent down to fix inflation - and may
make the Fed's job harder as it gives people room to handle $5-a-gallon gas.
The relationship between excess savings, its distribution across the economy,
and people's willingness to use the cash to cover higher prices is a key issue
in the Fed's inflation puzzle.
LOW BANKRUPTCY RATES
Another pandemic shoe that never dropped: Bankruptcy rates fell as the Paycheck
Protection Program and other initiatives kept firms alive.
A recession or significant slowdown may well trigger the washout that never
happened. According to data from Epiq, Chapter 11 commercial filings in May
increased 34% from a year earlier, though overall commercial filings were down
slightly.
American Bankruptcy Institute Executive Director Amy Quackenboss in a statement
said rising interest rates and higher prices had begun "compounding the economic
challenges for financially distressed families and businesses."
A RECESSION WITH NO SAFETY NET?
As a result of the unprecedented effort to keep businesses and families afloat,
the federal debt exploded. While the low-inflation, low-interest-rate
environment of the last quarter century or so triggered a broad rethinking about
public debt, some of the dynamics that argued for aggressive spending are now
moving the other way. When rates on government debt exceed the rate of economic
growth, for example, elected officials may not be so willing to roll out an
expansive safety net next time.
Given how soon that may occur - in a recent Reuters poll 40% of economists said
they expect a downturn within two years - the Fed may also be constrained. It
can cut rates, which may by then be high enough to provide a substantial
economic boost. But it will still be carrying a very large balance sheet, run up
to nearly $9 trillion during the pandemic, with policymakers less likely to
begin using that second tool to support the economy.
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Dan Burns)
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