US growth may be a global boon, but inflation could derail the train
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[April 15, 2024] By
Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. economic growth that keeps motoring above
its potential is emerging as a key prop for an ongoing global expansion,
but spillovers from persistently high inflation and tight monetary
policy in the world's largest economy could pose new risks to a
hoped-for "soft landing" around the world.
As global financial leaders gather in Washington this week for the
spring meetings of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank, the
outlook for the world's short-term economic fortunes may center on
whether the surprising U.S. success is being driven more by constructive
forces like increased labor supply and productivity or by outsized
fiscal deficits that continue stoking demand and, potentially,
inflation.
One answer supports what Chicago Federal Reserve President Austan
Goolsbee has labeled a "golden path" where strong growth and falling
inflation coexist, not only in the U.S. but in other countries tied to
it through exchange rates and trade channels that have kept imports near
record highs. The other may point to a bumpy ride ahead if the Fed
concludes that U.S. demand remains too strong for inflation to fall, and
decides it has to postpone expected interest rate cuts or - in the
extreme - resort to rate hikes it had all but taken off the table.
Recent data have not been helpful, with inflation stalled well above the
U.S. central bank's 2% target for the first quarter of the year, gross
domestic product still expanding above potential at 2.4% for the
January-March period, according to an Atlanta Fed tracker, and Fed
officials hedging their words about when the rate cuts might start.
"We're not yet where we want to be on inflation," Richmond Fed President
Thomas Barkin said last week, capping a seven-day run over which U.S.
jobs data showed firms hired an additional 303,000 workers in March, two
to three times the estimated non-inflationary pace, and new inflation
data further reversed the trends Fed policymakers relied on last year to
pivot towards rate cuts in 2024. Data on inflation expectations, closely
monitored by the Fed, also points to progress having stalled.
The data registered quickly in markets that lowered the outlook for a
Fed monetary easing, something global officials no doubt have noticed
ahead of discussions this week that may center on whether the world's
post-pandemic bout of inflation and tight monetary policy is ending, or
simply on hold until it is clear what happens in the U.S.
WATCHING FROM ABROAD
The IMF's latest World Economic Outlook summary of the global economy
will be released on Tuesday.
But recent U.S. data already have had repercussions.
Though the European Central Bank has kept its rate-cut and inflation
outlooks intact for now, ECB President Christine Lagarde's press
conference on Thursday was dominated by questions of just how far the
euro zone's monetary policy could diverge from that of the Fed if U.S.
inflation persists. Other central bankers were more explicit that an
extended inflation fight in the U.S. would constrain what they might be
able to do.
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A view of the Brickell neighborhood, known as the financial
district, in Miami, Florida, U.S., February 23, 2023. REUTERS/Marco
Bello/File photo
"It's not just about whether the Fed can decide to act in June or a
bit later, it's the entire monetary policy for maybe a year that is
under question," Per Jansson, deputy governor of Sweden's Riksbank,
told reporters, adding there was "not a zero chance" that the Fed
might have to discuss whether further hikes in borrowing costs are
needed.
That is not the baseline. The Fed's last round of economic
projections, issued in March, showed none of its policymakers
anticipated needing to move the U.S. central bank's benchmark
overnight interest rate above the current 5.25%-5.50% range, where
it has been since July.
But there was also a wedge creeping in, with minutes of the Fed's
March 19-20 policy meeting showing that "some participants" said
overall financial conditions may not be as tight as suspected,
"which could add momentum to aggregate demand and put upward
pressure on inflation," the sort of dynamic that, if sustained,
could argue for higher rates.
Strong growth in the face of the highest policy rate in a quarter of
a century has raised a series of questions for the Fed - and by
extension for the global economy - about whether the impact of
monetary policy is just slow to be felt, with a U.S. nosedive
coming, or whether aspects of the economy like labor participation
and productivity have changed for the better.
ELEVATED RISKS
The U.S. Congressional Budget Office recently raised its outlook for
potential U.S. economic growth on the basis of increased immigration
and labor productivity, factors that would allow the economy to
expand without generating inflation.
While Fed officials have acknowledged that both forces helped bring
down the pace of price increases last year at a surprisingly fast
rate - paving the way for what some have dubbed an "immaculate
disinflation" - it's unclear how deep that well goes.
If it's determined the economy remains too strong or financial
conditions too loose for a full return of inflation to the Fed's
target, the U.S. divergence now helping pull the world upward may
turn into a tight-money drag.
"I think the Fed's in watching-and-waiting mode," with perhaps only
a single quarter-percentage-point rate cut this year, said Karen
Dynan, a Harvard University professor and non-resident senior fellow
at the Peterson Institute for International Economics.
While she does expect tighter policy to "take the edge off" demand
and slow the U.S. economy, worse outcomes can't be ignored as long
as the inflation problem persists.
"It's really a 'soft landing' forecast ... but I do think the risks
of recession are somewhat elevated in the United States and other
countries," she said.
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Dan Burns and Paul Simao)
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