Economy on the Mend, But Inflation Stuck in Neutral
Thu Sep 12 2024
You're on a road trip, and your GPS tells you that you've finally reached your destination. But as you're celebrating, you realize that the GPS has been reading the wrong coordinates. That's roughly the situation with the US economy. The inflation rate has slowed down, but the underlying factors driving prices up remain stubbornly sticky. The Federal Reserve is poised to cut interest rates, but will this magic pill cure the economy's ailments? The jury is still out.
Consumer inflation has slowed to 2. 5 percent, the lowest annual figure since February 2021. Monthly inflation, however, picked up by 0. 2 percent. The White House is celebrating, claiming that inflation is 'turning the page. ' But the devil is in the details. The 'core' inflation rate, which strips out volatile food and energy costs, was largely unchanged. 'Catch-up inflation,' or the re-pricing of goods and services after the pandemic, is still driving inflation.
Does this mean the Fed should slow down on interest rate cuts? Bernard Yaros, Oxford Economics' lead US economist, thinks not. 'This isn't something the Fed can cure right away. ' The labor market has also cooled, giving policymakers room to maneuver. But will a rate cut in September, just two months before the presidential election, be seen as a political move? Investors are betting on it, with futures traders assigning a high probability of a rate cut next week.
The decision is a critical one, with implications for the global economy and the presidential election. Will the Fed stay focused on the economic data, or will politics play a role? We'll find out on September 18, when the Fed makes its announcement. For now, it's a waiting game.
https://localnews.ai/article/economy-on-the-mend-but-inflation-stuck-in-neutral-cd2a7ce7
continue reading...
questions
How will the Fed rate cut next week impact the presidential election?
What do the futures traders' probability assignments (85% for a quarter-point cut and 15% for a half-point cut) indicate?
What are the implications of the personal consumption expenditures price index (PCE) easing towards the bank's long-term two-percent target?
actions
flag content