Fed may be on cusp of emerging from ‘elevated’ inflation blues
Triggered after the personal consumption expenditures price index used by the Fed to set its inflation target topped 4% in May, June and July of that year, the elevated inflation description remains in the rate-setting
Downgrading how inflation is described to something milder than elevated could also lead the Fed to edit the other key sentence in its current policy statement: That rates would not be cut until officials "gained greater confidence that inflation is moving sustainably toward 2 percent."
Fed staff stopped describing inflation as elevated in January after the PCE fell below 3%, and policymakers heading into the
They have started using phrases like "drawing closer" to describe the distance remaining to a policy shift, and hinted at possible thresholds that could warrant changes in how the Fed describes the economy and its policy reaction to it.
In comments to reporters in late June, Atlanta Fed President
Many economists feel that threshold will be hit or exceeded when PCE data for June is released on
The opening sentences of the policy statement, with descriptions of growth, the job market and inflation, are used "to call balls and strikes" about the economy, Richmond Fed President
Shaping the discussion
Some economists feel a change is justified.
"They should make a more aggressive acknowledgment that inflation has cooled," said
A new housing inflation indicator, for example, developed by the
"There is additional slowing in housing rental inflation in the pipeline," Dutta added.
Fed staff have already made a shift, the minutes of recent
During last December's meeting, with available data showing inflation at 3%, central bank staff said inflation "had eased over the past year but remained elevated."
But at the meeting the following month, with PCE inflation having dipped to 2.6% in December, the elevated description was missing from the staff report. The staff said only that inflation "remained above 2%" after falling "markedly over the course of the year."
Staff commentary about the economy doesn't typically capture the limelight, since the Fed's deep bench of economists aren't the ones deciding on actions that can have lasting implications for the financial wellbeing of
But staff views do shape the discussion, and changes in tone can offer a signal about where policy is heading.
As price rises accelerated in 2021, Fed staff and policymakers first acknowledged that inflation "has risen," a phrase used in the April, June and July policy statements that year.
Year-over-year PCE inflation was still just 1.8% in
Staff made the shift to describing it as elevated in
Goods prices have been falling - a dependable drag on inflation in the decade before the COVID-19 pandemic that has resumed, at least for now.
Wages are moderating, and increases in a "sticky" set of services prices are as well.
The
Excluding high readings in early 2024 that now seem like noise and not the trend, Sharif noted that underlying inflation for 10 of the past 13 months had on average hit the Fed's 2% target.
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