Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Cautious consumers lifting hopes for US economy

Survey: Americans don’t expect inflation to last

- Christophe­r Rugaber and Anne D’Innocenzio

WASHINGTON – Call it the Goldilocks consumer.

Defying high inflation and sharp interest rate hikes, Americans keep spending – a trend that, if sustained, could keep the economy humming just enough to help avoid a much-predicted recession.

At the same time, surveys show that consumers on average don’t expect today’s still-high inflation to last for very long. That confidence could lead them to moderate their spending habits and wage demands, which would help slow inflation over time.

If the combinatio­n lasts, it could make it easier for the Federal Reserve to tame inflation without derailing the economy. As inflation eased, the Fed would be able to curtail its rate hikes, making a recession less likely.

“The economy is in the middling phase,” said Neil Saunders, managing director of GlobalData Retail. “It’s not too hot but not too cold, especially for retail. Things are not in the boom phase, but neither have they collapsed.”

Nearly three years after the pandemic caused a brief but brutal recession and then a powerful rebound, the economy appears to have entered a phase in which growth might not be so forceful as to fuel high inflation. One reason is that consumers are continuing to spend – just not at breakneck speed.

Consider the spending habits of Francisco Santana, who was stocking up on groceries last week at a Walmart in North Bergen, New Jersey. A New York City resident, Santana, 39, bought several hundred dollars’ worth of bacon, sugar, hamburger buns and cream cheese – among the necessitie­s he said should feed his family of five for a couple of weeks.

Yet Santana says he’s spending with caution. The inflation surge had led him to shift his grocery shopping from local chains to Walmart. He found a package of strawberri­es there for $5, he said, that

might have cost twice that at some other stores he’s shopped.

“I’m looking for quality and budget,” he said. “Inflation’s still a big issue.”

Consumer surveys, closely tracked by the Fed, show that two years into the worst bout of inflation in four decades, Americans’ expectatio­ns for future inflation remain modest and by some measures nearly back to pre-pandemic levels.

Lower inflation expectatio­ns matter because they can become self-perpetuati­ng: When people expect inflation to stay high, they typically demand and receive higher pay. Businesses then often charge their customers more to offset their higher labor costs, further fueling inflation. In that way, rising inflation expectatio­ns can turn high prices from a temporary disruption, like an oil supply crunch, into something longer-lasting.

But lower inflation expectatio­ns can reverse that dynamic and help cool inflation.

A survey by the New York Federal Reserve Bank earlier this week found that the typical consumer expects inflation to be just 2.7% in three years, down from 4.2% in the fall of 2021 and barely above the level in January 2020. That’s far below the current inflation rate of 6.4%. Shorter-term inflation expectatio­ns are higher: The median consumer expects inflation of 5% in a year. Still, that’s down from a peak of 6.8% last June.

By contrast, in January 1980, when U.S. inflation soared well into the double-digits, expectatio­ns for inflation one year ahead peaked at 10.4%, according to a separate survey by the University of Michigan.

“If I think prices are going to go up in the future, I think, well, this looks expensive, but I better get it now because it’ll be more expensive tomorrow,” said Laura Veldkamp, a finance professor at Columbia Business School. “And so then I’m willing to pay much higher prices. But I think now people don’t have in mind that things are going to be a lot more expensive next year.”

Laurence Ball, an economist at John Hopkins University, noted that in countries with hyperinflation, expectatio­ns can completely distort behavior. In Brazil in the 1980s, when inflation was rising 20% a month, hours-long lines at grocery stores would form at the start of the month as shoppers sought to spend their money before prices shot higher by the end of the month.

“Decreasing inflation expectatio­ns,” Ball said, “are unambiguou­sly good for the inflation fight.”

He added, though, that he’s still concerned about the robust jobs market and how sharp pay raises may still keep inflation elevated.

On Wednesday, the government reported that retail sales jumped 3% in January, the largest one-month increase since a stimulus-check-fueled rise nearly two years ago. Yet last month’s surge followed two months of falling retail spending, in November and December, and economists said that looking at the three months together likely provided a more accurate picture.

There are signs, too, that consumers and businesses remain cautious – a sentiment that could prevent spending from accelerati­ng excessivel­y and reigniting inflation. Last month, the Federal Reserve’s “beige book,” a compilatio­n of anecdotes from businesses across the country, reported that some merchants were beginning to face pushback from consumers against higher prices.

“Many retailers noted increased difficulty in passing through cost increases, suggesting greater price sensitivit­y on the part of consumers,” the beige book said. “In addition, some retailers offered more discounts and promotions than they had a year ago in order to move merchandis­e and clear out excess inventorie­s.”

Regina Barbosa, who works at a community group in Fairview, New Jersey, has also started shopping more at Walmart in response to higher prices. She has also stopped going to Broadway shows, which she used to do once a month.

She feels the impact of inflation every day, she said, in “everything we eat at home, everything we need for home life – those kind of things.”

Michelle Meyer, chief economist at the MasterCard Economics Institute, said the institute’s data on consumers’ use of credit cards showed that more shoppers have resumed looking for bargains and promotiona­l discounts. That wasn’t happening a year ago, when major supply shortages led many consumers to spend freely to ensure that they could get the holiday gifts and other goods that they wanted.

“We are seeing price discountin­g and we’re seeing consumers search for some of those promotions and spend around that promotion cycle,” she said. “I think the inflation psychology has been amazingly well contained.”

Fed officials have expressed optimism that Americans’ inflation expectatio­ns will remain subdued. Still, they remain cautious out of concern that if price pressures re-accelerate, inflation expectatio­ns could shoot higher again.

“Expectatio­ns seem to be well-anchored,” Fed Chair Jerome Powell said at a news conference earlier this month. “I think that’s very reassuring. The public has decided that inflation is going to come back down to 2%, and it’s just a matter of us following through. That’s immeasurab­ly helpful to the process of getting inflation down.”

“But that’s not grounds for complacenc­y,” Powell warned. “Although inflation has moderated recently, it remains too high. The longer the current bout of high inflation continues, the greater the chance that expectatio­ns of higher inflation will become entrenched.”

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