The Oklahoman

Fed survey finds drags on economy

Supply-chain and labor issues hurt some sectors

- Martin Crutsinger

WASHINGTON – The Federal Reserve reports that the economy faced a number of headwinds at the start of this month, ranging from supply-chain disruption­s and labor shortages to uncertaint­y about the delta variant of COVID-19.

In its latest survey of business conditions around the nation, the Fed said Wednesday that a majority of its 12 regions viewed consumer spending, the main driving force for the economy, as remaining positive despite the various speed bumps.

The report noted wide differences in performanc­e, however. It noted that auto sales suffered because of constraine­d inventorie­s due to problems obtaining critical semiconduc­tor components. Manufactur­ing, meanwhile, was growing either moderately or robustly depending on which Fed district was reporting.

“Outlook for near-term economic activity remained positive, overall, but some districts noted increased uncertaint­y and more cautious optimism than in previous months,” the Fed said in the report on business conditions nationwide, known as the beige book.

The report, based on surveys of business contacts by the Fed’s 12 regional banks, will form the basis for discussion when central bank officials next meet on Nov. 2-3.

The Fed is widely expected to announce at that meeting that it will begin to reduce, or taper, its $120 billion in monthly bond purchases starting either in November or December.

Those purchases were designed to give the economy a boost by holding down long-term interest rates.

A move to trim the purchases is expected to be followed in the second half of next year with the first rate hikes. The Fed’s benchmark interest rate has been at an ultra-low zero to 0.25% since the pandemic struck with force in the spring of 2020, but there are growing calls to begin removing its support in the face of rising price pressures

The beige book found “significantly elevated” prices with widespread increases across industry sectors due in large part to supply-chain bottleneck­s.

Prices for steel and electronic components and shipping costs all “rose markedly,” the report said.

Expectatio­ns for future price increases varied, the Fed report said, with some business contacts expecting prices to remain high or even increase further, while others expected prices to moderate over the next the next 12 months.

Fed board member Randall Quarles said Wednesday that he believes inflation will start to “decline considerab­ly next year from its currently very elevated rate.” That reflects his belief that the factors now disrupting the economy “appear likely to fade over time.”

The beige book report noted that while the demand for labor was high, job gains had been dampened by a low supply of workers, forcing many retail, hospitalit­y and manufactur­ing companies to cut hours or production because they did not have enough employees.

“Firms reported high turnover as workers left for other jobs or retired,” the Fed report said. “Child-care issues and vaccine mandates were widely cited as contributi­ng to the problem.”

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