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US: Inflation worrywarts are crashing the party

With no recession in sight, commentators are swinging back to concerns about a too-hot economy pressuring prices higher

March 05, 2024 / 18:00 IST
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The inflation data itself, which is all that really matters for monetary policy so long as the labor market stays on track.

A curious thing has happened in the US market discourse: In the absence of major concerns about jobs and growth, commentators have started to worry that the economy is too good to keep inflation contained. The most salient recent example is Apollo Global Management Inc. Chief Economist Torsten Slok, who said last week that economic strength will prevent the Federal Reserve from cutting policy rates in 2024.

I, for one, am extremely skeptical.

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Consider recent trends. Although the US posted impressively strong growth in the second half of 2023, there are early signs of moderation in the first quarter of 2024. The Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow tracker has gross domestic product expanding at about 2.1% in the first quarter, close to the level that the Congressional Budget Office estimates as the economy’s potential (read: non-inflationary) growth rate. What’s more, there’s evidence from high-frequency retail sales data that real consumption may have weakened in February. Those data points serve to caution us against over-anchoring our views on the real economy to data that’s now several months old.

Second, there’s the inflation data itself, which is all that really matters for monetary policy so long as the labor market stays on track. The economy could be growing at 5% a year, but if it doesn’t cause inflation why should policymakers mess with success?