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Consumer Inflation Expectations Ease as Tightening Pinches Wallets

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U.S. consumer inflation expectations declined across the board in August, a new central bank report found.

According to the latest Survey of Consumer Expectations (SCE) from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, inflation expectations one year out fell from 6.2 percent in July to 5.7 percent last month. Consumer expectations for three- and five-year horizons dropped to 2.8 percent and 2 percent, respectively.

The survey data show that consumers anticipate prices rising less for critical goods and services.

Gasoline prices are expected to be roughly the same a year from now. The national average cost for a gallon of gasoline is $3.71, according to the American Automobile Association (AAA).

Year-ahead price changes also tumbled by 0.8 percentage points for food, to 5.8 percent, and slid by 0.3 percentage points for rent, to 9.6 percent. Median home price expectations plunged by 1.4 percentage points, to 2.1 percent, the lowest level since July 2020. One-year-ahead price growth for college education stayed the same, at 8.4 percent, while medical care inched higher to 9.3 percent.

When looking ahead to the labor market a year from now, earnings growth expectations were flat at 3 percent, while the median perceived probability of losing a job slipped by 0.7 percentage points.

But while inflation forecasts tumbled last month, median household spending growth expectations rose to 7.8 percent. In addition, with interest rates on the rise, credit access is expected to deteriorate, as 57 percent say it will be harder to obtain credit one year from now. The average perceived probability of missing a minimum debt payment over the next three months climbed by 1.4 percentage points, to 12.2 percent, the highest since May 2020.

Overall, one-third of households anticipate their financial situations will worsen over the next year, and less than 42 percent think it will stay the same.

Will Inflation Come Down?

Do professional forecasters and economists share consumers’ optimism over inflation?

According to Preston Caldwell, an equity analyst for Morningstar, higher long-term prices suggest less reason for concern as U.S. inflation is expected to average 2.4 percent from 2022 to 2026. He noted that large deflation in prices for durable goods, energy, and food over the next three years is the base-case scenario.

“For durable goods, resolution of the semiconductor shortage should play a large role in expanding supply. A normalization of consumer spending mix will also shift demand away from durables (and other goods) and back into services,” he wrote. “For food and energy, prices should subside as these industries adjust to disruption from the Russia–Ukraine conflict and other factors.”

The Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis noted that inflation is headed lower, but the debate will be how much it will fall.

“While the expected return to positive GDP growth is heartening, heightened uncertainty about the outlook for medium-term inflation and the likelihood of further tightening actions by the [Federal Open Market Committee] suggests that risks to the macroeconomy remain tilted to the downside,” wrote Kevin Liesen, a business economist at the regional central bank, in a research note.

Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia’s Survey of Professional Forecasters (SPF) showed that the Consumer Price Index (CPI) will fall to 3.2 percent in 2023 and 2.5 percent in 2024.

But while this suggests that inflation peaked in June, at 9.1 percent, Bob Bilbruck, an author and CEO of financial technology services firm Captjur, told The Epoch Times that it is unlikely the Fed will bring inflation down below 5 percent or 6 percent.

“In fact, it’s going to be hard to save the failing economy when unemployment kicks in, because unlike 2008 when the government injected capital into the markets to save the failing banks, this time around all that will do is cause more massive inflation,” he said. “The Fed is going to be between a rock and a hard place—government spending has and will continue to cripple this economy.”

But Richard Gardner, the CEO of financial engineering company Modulus, is monitoring the core Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) inflation rate.

“While the core PCE inflation rate, which excludes food and energy, has dropped from 5.3 percent in February to 4.6 percent in July, the Dallas Fed has come out and said that the drop is almost exclusively due to the inflation of goods falling, while inflation for services has continued to rise,” Gardner told The Epoch Times. “You can expect that to mean, though the PCE has technically peaked, its decline may be slow. It is worth noting, however, that core inflation really is a lagging indicator.”

In the end, predicting inflation may be a “fool’s game,” says former Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin.

“The best answer about inflation is: Who the hell knows?” he said at last week’s NYC Summit, an annual event of tech and venture capital experts. “In all the time I’ve been involved in markets, I have learned that trying to make judgments on short- and intermediate-term market conditions is a fool’s game.”

Inflation, Higher Rates Weighing on Consumers’ Wallets

In today’s economic climate, more Americans are taking on debt and saving less as inflation and higher interest rates impact consumers’ wallets.

A new study by personal-finance website WalletHub found that U.S. consumers racked up $67.1 billion of debt in the second quarter, a record high for this time of the year. The website forecasts that consumers will add an all-time high total of $110 billion in debt this year.

“Credit card debt levels are rising at a record pace, in large part due to the combination of high inflation, pent-up demand, and consumers settling back into bad habits from before the pandemic,” said Delaney Simchuck, a WalletHub analyst, in a statement. “Many people have let their guard down after pinching pennies at the height of the pandemic, especially given the record employment levels we’re currently enjoying.”

Study authors warned that this new debt would become more expensive as the Federal Reserve raises the benchmark fed funds rate. Next week, the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) is widely expected to pull the trigger on a rate hike of 75 basis points. WalletHub economists predict this will add an extra $5.3 billion in credit card debt over the next 12 months. The figure is in addition to the $15.3 billion increase already triggered by the central bank’s efforts.

The Fed’s inflation-busting tightening has affected household finances, with 63 percent of Americans reporting that their wallets have been affected by the central bank’s rate hikes in 2022.

“The cost of Fed rate hikes is obvious to people with credit card debt, who start feeling the pain immediately, and millions of Americans are in that boat,” added Simchuck.

Although 85 percent are worried about inflation now, more than half (56 percent) purport they prefer high inflation over high unemployment.

One of the biggest concerns on Wall Street is that the Fed will be unable to achieve a soft landing and instead will send the country into a sharp economic downturn. Nearly half (44 percent) do not think they are financially prepared to handle a recession.

Andrew Moran

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Andrew Moran covers business, economics, and finance. He has been a writer and reporter for more than a decade in Toronto, with bylines on Liberty Nation, Digital Journal, and Career Addict. He is also the author of “The War on Cash.”



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