Miami Herald

Fed staffers say Wall Street is getting inflation call all wrong

- BY STEVE MATTHEWS

The Federal Reserve’s army of more than 400 Ph.D. economists has a message on inflation for policymake­rs and the American public: Chill out.

While some officials are publicly anxious about rising prices and Wall

Street has ramped up its forecasts, the Fed’s staff in Washington predicts inflation will be back under 2% in 2022, according to minutes of last month’s Federal Open Market Committee

meeting released Oct. 13.

As well as being below the FOMC’s long-term 2% target, it’s less than half the 4.3% pace that the Fed’s preferred measure of price pressures recorded in the year through August.

“You should take it very seriously,” said Claudia Sahm, a former Fed economist and senior fellow at the Jain Family Institute.

“It doesn’t mean it’s right, but you have the top forecaster­s in the world” preparing the numbers. “Looking over time, there is no forecastin­g shop that can come even close to the board’s analysis of the near-term economy.”

Chair Jerome Powell and his colleagues expect elevated inflation to abate next year. But officials say there is a high degree of uncertaint­y around the outlook and risks on price pressures are to the upside.

Hindsight provides a reminder of how hard it is to predict the economy.

Staff forecasts a year ago anticipate­d inflation would pick up from levels at that time around 1.3%, according to minutes of the FOMC’s September 2020 meeting, but not the leap that happened. Policymake­rs themselves projected inflation of just 1.7% for 2021 and Powell was mainly asked during his post-meeting news conference about the risks of continuing to undershoot the Fed’s 2% goal. He voiced confidence that inflation would rise.

Even so, Fed staff forecasts have regularly bettered Wall Street consensus forecasts, according to St. Louis Fed economist Michael Owyang, who with co-authors documented a significan­t advantage in 2019, as well as other researcher­s.

“The Fed’s staff forecasts for inflation have been historical­ly more accurate than consensus forecasts,” the economist said in a Thursday interview.

While the staff’s detailed forecasts contained in the Tealbook distribute­d to the FOMC won’t be released for another five years, the staff view was that the surge would be “transitory.”

“The boost to consumer prices caused by supply issues was expected to partly reverse and import prices were expected to decelerate sharply,” the minutes said. “PCE price inflation was therefore expected to step down to a little below 2% in 2022.” The staff did add that risks on inflation are to the upside.

A less-than-2% inflation forecast compares to the FOMC participan­ts who are expecting 2.2% inflation in 2022, or 2.3% excluding food and energy, according to their median estimate. Economic forecasts surveyed by Bloomberg News are looking for 2.9% inflation in 2022.

By contrast to the staff, St. Louis Fed President James Bullard said Thursday there’s a 50% chance that high inflation will persist, and said it could even go higher next year. Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic said he has banned the use of the word “transitory,” depositing a dollar bill in a glass jar each time it’s used, because inflation hasn’t proved to be as temporary as expected.

“The board staff is exceedingl­y optimistic,” said Stephen Stanley, who is chief economist at Amherst Pierpont Securities and has warned the Fed’s continuing monetary stimulus is “like squirting lighter fluid on a roaring bonfire.”

Fed officials broadly agreed last month they should start reducing emergency pandemic support for the economy in mid-November or midDecembe­r amid increasing concern over inflation, according to the minutes.

Research co-authored by Christina Romer, a former chair of the Council of Economic Advisers in the Obama administra­tion, also found that

Fed staff forecasts were more accurate than forecasts from FOMC participan­ts or private-sector economists.

Anyone making prediction­s would do well to discard the committee forecasts in favor of the staff, and “should put little or negative weight on the commercial forecasts,” she and co-author David Romer wrote in 2008.

A study published by the European Central Bank in 2014 agreed, finding that Fed staff forecasts are more accurate than private forecasts.

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