The lack of recession in the US is a problem for Fed policy. How strong is the US economy and what does it mean for Powell and his rate choices?
While the Fed is expected to keep rates unchanged, interest in the US economy is strong.
The crucial point that analysts are evaluating is that during its two-year battle against inflation, the US central bank has tried - so far in vain - to go against consumers through higher interest rates so as to stop spending, align demand to supply, and push U.S. economic growth below its level to ease price pressure.
All this, however, has not happened, and Fed policymakers must now judge whether the better-than-expected performance of the economy is the last gasp of the wave of consumption that began during the COVID-19 pandemic or evidence that the monetary policy is not yet tight enough to fully bring inflation back to the 2% target.
The missed US recession risks turning into a nightmare for Powell and the others on the board.
There is no recession in the US. What does the Fed risk?
Since the last monetary policy meeting in September, when central bank policymakers also left rates unchanged, incoming data has shown stronger than expected employment growth, a stronger than expected economic recovery, and only a slow improvement in the pace of inflation which, at 3.4% in September, according to the Fed’s preferred indicator, remains well above the target.
Of course, there are more alarming signs. Yields on long-term U.S. Treasury securities have risen since last summer, and the average rate on a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage has risen to nearly 8%, a level not seen in nearly a quarter-century. Ultimately, Fed officials believe these developments will slow business and household spending.
For now, though, pandemic-era savings, combined with low unemployment and continued healthy wage increases, are allowing consumers to continue fueling strong economic growth. That countered concerns that developments like rolling student loan payments and weakening consumer confidence would cause people to moderate spending.
Instead, consumer-facing companies like McDonald’s and Amazon delivered consensus-beating profits, while home prices continued to rise despite high mortgage rates.
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Ever since pandemic-era programs pumped trillions of dollars into families’ bank accounts, economists have been trying to grapple with when those extra savings would run out. After the US government reported excellent third-quarter economic growth data last week, some analysts reassessed the situation and suggested that perhaps there may still be $1 trillion left to fuel consumption and, potentially, higher prices.
In short, spending has continued to grow despite consumer confidence levels which, according to the Conference Board, have fallen to recessionary levels amid a host of concerns.
The problem now is according to Powell growth must slow and, if not, it means that the Fed’s key rate will have to increase.
Original article published on Money.it Italy 2023-11-01 15:36:10. Original title: Gli Usa non sono in recessione (per ora). E questo è un problema per la Fed