Inflation in the US is improving, the public mood is still sour
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[November 15, 2023] By
Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - As families in the U.S. prepare to gather for
their Thanksgiving dinners next week, food prices have largely flatlined
for months, gasoline prices are about 10% lower than a year ago, and the
average cost of much of what goes into a shopping cart has been roughly
unchanged for a year.
But the steady ebbing of inflation hasn't translated into good news for
either President Joe Biden or the Federal Reserve when it comes to
public opinion. Attitudes towards both have kept slipping in light of
one unchanging fact: Stuff remains pricier than it was before the
coronavirus pandemic, and will likely stay that way.
"Inflation falls ... but prices don't come down. They're just going up
at a slower rate," Fed Governor Christopher Waller said last week when
asked at a research conference about common public misconceptions. "What
people have in their mind right now is ... prices to go back to where
they were in 2021. That's not going to happen. These prices are probably
there forever."
The White House and the Fed got some good news on Tuesday when the
latest inflation data showed that prices overall did not increase
between September and October, a rare reprieve from the steady climb
that has cut about 15% from the U.S. dollar's purchasing power since
Biden took office in early 2021.
There are reasons, too, to think inflation might continue to ease.
Though housing cost increases are proving more persistent than expected,
economists at the Fed and on Wall Street are confident a turn lower is
coming in a sector that accounts for a big portion of the consumer price
index. Moreover, recent inflation has been driven by services items,
such as auto insurance and video streaming, that will likely prove to be
one-off adjustments, with insurers, for example, raising premiums to
account for earlier vehicle price hikes that have leveled off.
Yet Biden's disapproval rating has risen to 56%, according to a Reuters/Ipsos
poll in early November, and has been above 50% since prices began to
steadily rise as the economy emerged from the pandemic. Earlier surveys
found about 60% of respondents disapproved of the Democratic president's
handling of inflation and 56% of his handling of the economy overall,
though the results showed a heavy partisan slant. Even with a still-low
unemployment rate, 46% of respondents disapproved of Biden's stewardship
of the job market while just 41% approved.
The results have not been much better for the Fed. A September Gallup
poll found a record 25% of respondents gave the central bank a "poor"
performance rating. Only 36% said it was doing a good or excellent job,
the worst such reading in a decade.
'HARD TO CHANGE'
The findings reinforce a fact that has dogged public officials for
decades. When it comes to basic household economics, the public's memory
of bad news is slow to recede.
For example, through the wild pandemic ride of shutdowns, government
stimulus payments and rapid price hikes, inflation-adjusted incomes as
of this past September are about 6% higher than they were in January
2020, on the eve of the COVID-19 outbreak. The drop in the dollar's
purchasing power, in other words, has been more than offset by fatter
wallets.
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Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook heads in to attend the opening
dinner of the Kansas City Fed's annual economic symposium in Jackson
Hole, Wyoming, U.S., August 24, 2023. REUTERS/Ann Saphir/File Photo
Yet surveys show continued skepticism about what's ahead. Inflation
expectations have fallen, according to a New York Fed survey but
remain well above the central bank's 2% target. The same survey
showed a larger share of people, nearly 31%, expect their household
financial situation to be worse a year from now than the 28% who
expected it to be better off.
General optimism was the rule before the pandemic, with responses of
"somewhat" and "much" better off typically two to four times that of
those who expected things to get worse.
But the mood became persistently pessimistic as inflation
accelerated - with the shock, for instance, of a 20% rise in food
prices from March 2021 through 2022 more resonant than the fact that
food costs have been nearly unchanged in 2023.
"Once these attitudes are established, they are hard to change,"
said Jeff Jones, a senior editor at Gallup. "We have seen other
times when the economy was bad. The negative evaluations persist and
need a pretty long period of consistently good economic news" to
shift back.
SHIFTING FOCUS
While Biden faces a reelection in a little under 12 months, the Fed
prides itself on being immune from the influence of elected
officials and public sentiment.
After roughly two years when the focus has been squarely on
inflation, attention may start to shift if economic data continues
in the current direction of slowing inflation and weaker job growth.
Both Waller and Fed Governor Lisa Cook took note of the public mood
last week in similar comments about the expectation for prices to
fall, which they don't frequently do.
But if inflation readings continue to show a slowdown, the Fed could
put more weight on sustaining the strength of the job market.
Indeed, after the release of the CPI data on Tuesday, investors
boosted bets on rate cuts beginning next spring.
"Seeing as prices will never come back down ... then the only way to
win back the hearts and minds of the public is to make sure real
incomes rise enough," Derek Tang, an economist at Monetary Policy
Analytics, wrote ahead of Tuesday's data.
"As long as inflation does not rise again ... the (Fed) might opt to
make sure the real side remains healthy enough to generate income
growth to let spending power catch up."
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Dan Burns and Paul Simao)
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