Eakinomics:
Officials and the Economic Outlook
The Federal Reserve released its “Beige Book.”
The Beige Book is an anecdotal survey of economic conditions in each of
the 12 Federal Reserve districts; this one was compiled by the Richmond
Federal Reserve Bank. The bottom line is that growth is at a “modest to
moderate rate.” For comparison, the Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow
estimate of third quarter growth is 0.5 percent, while the New York Fed’s
similar NowCast
checked in at 3.8 percent.
Districts in particular noted supply constraints and concerns over the
Delta variant. The former is cited as being central to the state of
inflation. Inflation is more than double the Fed’s 2 percent target as
the Fed’s preferred measure (the price index for personal consumption
expenditures) is up 4.3 percent year-over-year – the largest annual gain
in three decades. According to the Boston Fed, “Retailers and
manufacturers posted moderate to steep price increases amid ongoing
supply disruptions. The outlook was cautiously optimistic.” The latter
showed up as a labor market hurdle. “Firms reported high turnover, as
workers left for other jobs or retired,” according to the beige book.
Also, “Child-care issues and vaccine mandates were widely cited as contributing
to the problem.”
In short, growth has dropped off from the roughly 6.5 percent pace in the
first half of the year. Nonetheless, the Fed still plans to begin
reducing its $120 billion monthly dose of monetary stimulus in the next
two months. In the presence of diminished supply growth it makes no sense
to stomp the demand accelerator. Looking forward, Secretary of the
Treasury Janet Yellen remains optimistic. Appearing on MSNBC, Bloomberg reports:
“Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said she still expects the U.S. economy
to return to full employment ‘next year,’ even after a slowdown in the
pace of hiring. ‘The labor market in many ways is very tight,’ Yellen
said in an interview with MSNBC television that aired Wednesday morning,
adding that the economy is still recovering from the pandemic, which she
described as ‘a very, very unusual shock.’”
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