Growth
in US may Rebound on the Back of Hike in Fed Rate
The
Federal Reserve has raised rates rapidly. But instead of cracking, some data
point to an economy that’s thriving.
·
The
Fed has lifted rates from near zero early last year to above 4.5 percent as of
last week — the fastest series of policy adjustment in decades.
·
Inflation
and wage growth have slowed in recent months even with very strong hiring.
Many economists and
investors had a clear narrative coming into 2023: The Federal Reserve had spent
months pushing borrowing costs rapidly higher in a bid to tame inflation, and
those moves were expected to slow growth and the labor
market so much that the economy would be at risk of plunging into a downturn.
But the recession calls are
now getting a rethink.
Employers added more than
half a million jobs in January, the housing market shows signs of stabilizing
or even picking back up, and many Wall Street economists have marked down the
odds of a downturn this year. After months of asking whether the Fed could pull
off a soft landing in which the economy slows but does not plummet into a
bruising recession, analysts are raising the possibility that it will not land
at all — that growth will simply hold up.
Not every data point looks
sunny: Manufacturing
remains glum, consumer spending has been cracking,
and some analysts still think a mild recession this year remains likely. But
there have been enough surprises pointing to continued momentum that Fed
officials themselves seem to see a better chance that the nation will avoid a
painful downturn. That resilience could even be a problem.
While a gentle landing would
be a welcome development, economists are beginning to ask whether growth and
the job market will run too warm for inflation to slow as much as central
bankers are hoping — eventually forcing the Fed to respond more aggressively.
“They should be worried
about how strong the U.S. labor market is,” said Ajay
Rajadhyaksha, the global chairman of research at
Barclays. “So far, the U.S. economy has proved unexpectedly resilient.”
The Fed has lifted rates
from near zero early last year to above 4.5 percent as of last week — the
fastest series of policy adjustment in decades. Those higher borrowing costs
have translated into pricier car loans and mortgages, and for a while they
seemed to be clearly slowing the economy.
But as the central bank has
shifted toward a more moderate pace of rate moves — it slowed the speed of its
increases first in December, then again this month —
markets have relaxed. Rates on mortgages,
for example, have come down slightly.
That’s showing up in the
economy. Mortgage
applications have been bouncing around, but in general
they have ticked back up. New
home sales are now hovering around the same level as before the
pandemic. Used
car prices had been declining, but they have begun to rise at a
wholesale level — which some economists see as a response to some returning
demand for those vehicles.
And while retail sales and
other measures of household spending have been pulling back, according to
recent data, several nascent forces could help to shore up consumer demand into
2023 — with potentially big implications for the Fed’s battle against
inflation.
Social Security recipients
just received a sizable cost-of-living adjustment in their first check of 2023,
putting more money in the pockets of older Americans. More than a dozen states,
including Virginia, California, New
York
and Massachusetts,
sent tax rebates or stimulus checks late last year. And while Americans have
been working their way through the excess savings that were amassed during the
early pandemic, many still have some cushion left.
Adding to all of that, after
more than a year in which inflation eroded consumer spending power, wage gains
are finally beginning to outstrip price changes by some measures in recent
months. And with employers continuing to hire, more Americans are receiving paychecks, which they could in turn spend.
“Such employment gains mean labor income will also be robust and buoy consumer
spending, which could maintain upward pressure on inflation in the months
ahead,” Christopher Waller, a Fed governor, said on Wednesday.
There is no guarantee that
those factors will be enough to counteract the large amount of policy
adjustment the Fed has done over the past year. Technology companies have
already begun to lay off workers. Lower-income consumers have burned through
their savings buffers more quickly than higher-income people, leaving them with
less wherewithal to shop.
“I don’t think we’re
re-accelerating,” said Nela Richardson, chief
economist at the payroll and data company ADP. “You can have a strong labor market and slow economic growth.”
But the possibility that the
economy will not grow as modestly as expected is a risk for the Fed.
Inflation has been cooling
in recent months, partly because prices for used cars and some retail products
have outright dropped, subtracting from overall price increases.
But if auto dealers and
retail stores like Walmart and Target feel that they can stop slashing prices
as demand stabilizes and they work through bloated inventories, it could keep
inflation from slowing as steadily, said Omair
Sharif, founder of Inflation Insights.
“The concern is now you
shift to a situation where that downward pressure goes away,” he said. “Wages
are still supportive of people buying more stuff.”
Jerome H. Powell, the Fed
chair, acknowledged during a news conference last week that some of the drag on
inflation from goods could be “transitory,”
meaning that it will fade away. That is, in part, why central bankers are
closely watching what happens in other sectors, particularly services.
One major service cost —
rent — does look poised to decelerate this year. But both the extent and the
timing are enormously uncertain: Some economists think that rent increases will
slow in official inflation data within the coming months, while others are
expecting the change to come much later.
Lael Brainard, the Fed vice
chair, suggested in a recent speech that rent inflation might not decline until
the
third quarter of 2023, which stretches from July through
September.
The trajectory for other
service prices, from child-care to restaurant meals, is expected to hinge on
what happens with the labor market. Wages tend to be
a major cost for service companies, and if pay is climbing swiftly, businesses
may charge more. Workers who are taking home bigger paychecks
may be able to keep spending through those cost increases.
To be sure, inflation and
wage growth have slowed in recent months even with very strong hiring. Fed
officials have embraced that, and they have made clear that they’re focused on
what happens with inflation rather than aiming for a specific increase in
unemployment.
But several have expressed
doubts that wage and price moderation can continue with labor
demand so robust and a jobless rate at 3.4 percent, the lowest since 1969.
Companies will be left competing for a limited pool of workers. And given that
today’s disinflation is coming partly from product price declines that are not
expected to continue indefinitely, slowing down services prices is crucial.
“The services sector,
really, except for housing services, is not really showing any disinflation
yet,” Mr. Powell said this week.
The question for the Fed is
how much more policy adjustment is needed to ensure that the economy and
inflation return to a sustainable pace. The central bank has forecast that it
will make two more quarter-point rate increases.
John C. Williams, the
president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, indicated on Wednesday that
quarter-point moves were likely to remain the norm, but he suggested that rates
might have to adjust by more if demand and price increases stayed elevated.
“Demand in our economy is
much stronger right now than you might expect in a regular, prepandemic
situation,” Mr. Williams said, attributing that to fiscal support, a strong labor market and other factors. How high rates must climb
in order “to be sufficiently restrictive has got to be influenced by that.”
Although many business
leaders are still watching consumers warily, some of them have suggested that
impediments to growth are fading. The S&P 500 as a whole has been
recovering over the past six months, a sign that investors see a sunnier
outlook on the horizon.
Ryan Marshall, chief
executive officer of the homebuilder Pulte Group, suggested in an earnings call last week that the housing market was
noticeably improving.
“Despite the higher-rate
environment dominating the national conversation, we saw buyer demand improve
as the fourth quarter progressed and can confirm this strength continued
through the month of January,” he said.
And David B. Burritt, the
chief executive of U.S. Steel, said in a recent earnings call that he expected
“prices will be sustainable and higher” in the longer-term as headwinds to
growth fade.
“We’re in this transitional
period with a lot of uncertainty,” he said, “and frankly I think a lot of
people think the Fed is doing a lot better job on this soft landing than what
was expected.”
Neil Dutta, head of U.S.
economics at Renaissance Macro, said that the re-acceleration signs in the
economy were “undeniable,” and that inflation could get stuck at unusually high
levels as a result — forcing the Fed to keep rates high for longer than
expected.
“They’ve been raising rates
for a while,” he said. “All they have to show for it is an unemployment rate at
3.4 percent.”