HomeNewsOpinionUS Fed should watch inflation. It could follow current economic upswing with a lag

US Fed should watch inflation. It could follow current economic upswing with a lag

Moderating core inflation shouldn’t, on its own, be enough to give Fed officials confidence that their job is done. Inflation will ultimately follow the trajectory of economic growth, which continues to surprise on the upside in the US. In this scenario, the Fed should consider further tightening of​ policy regardless of inflation forecasts for the rest of this year

July 27, 2023 / 14:22 IST
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US Fed
The Fed should consider further tightening policy if economic activity continues to surprise on the upside.

Signs of abating inflation have lifted the spirits of investors, the White House and the general public this month. While a welcome relief, inflation tends to be a lagging rather than a leading economic indicator. More forward-looking measures of activity show economic growth picking up again and, should that be sustained, inflation will likely be a problem for households and a headache for policymakers once again next year.

The performance of financial markets, particularly stocks and corporate credit spreads, is the simplest way to argue that growth is picking up. The S&P 500’s total return so far this year is close to 20 percent. The Nasdaq 100 is up over 40 percent. The Markit CDX North America Investment Grade Credit Index is near its lowest level since early 2022, indicating confidence in the performance of high-quality companies. To the extent that markets represent the collective judgment of investors about the direction of the economy, things are pointing up.

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Increasingly, there are hard numbers to substantiate this. Last week’s housing data showed single-family building permits climbed to a one-year high, rising 23 percent over the past six months. DR Horton, the largest homebuilder in the US, reported strong earnings and said the lack of resale inventory should continue to boost new home sales. Increased residential construction is likely to provide a meaningful boost to gross domestic product growth in the third quarter for the first time since the start of 2021.

There are signs of stability or reacceleration in the labor market as well. Initial jobless claims are at the lowest level in two months and the number of people collecting unemployment benefits has fallen modestly since a peak in April. Guy Berger, principal economist at LinkedIn, wrote last week that the platform’s gauge of workforce confidence has improved in recent months, potentially because employers have paused job cuts after the wave of reductions that came in the second half of 2022 and early 2023.