Fed poised to cut interest rates, but will it matter to Virginia voters?
At long last, the
But will it matter when
The answer might depend on whether they base their vote on how they act or how they feel.
"People are worried, but they're still spending," said
Consumer behavior is not the same as consumer sentiment, as the
Inflation has come down to 3%, based on the Consumer Price Index over the past 12 months, after peaking above 9 percent more than two years ago. The Gross Domestic Product increased by 2.8% in the last quarter. Unemployment ticked up to 4.1% nationally, a sign that the economy is cooling as the Fed had hoped in its push to lower prices. The stock market is booming year to date, despite recent volatility.
But analysts said those positive signs don't necessarily make people feel better because they still feel the cumulative effects of inflation on the prices they pay at the grocery store, gasoline station and the checks they write each month to their mortgage company or landlord.
"Those prices are already there, and they're not going down," said
The stock market already has assumed a quarter-percent rate cut into its pricing decisions, Engelke said. He doubts that a rate cut - or potentially a series of cuts through the end of the year - would have any effect on the election or provide immediate relief to consumers.
But he also thinks the Fed would be unwise to hold off on cutting rates until inflation falls to its target of 2% because of "the pain" inflicted to get there.
"The cure to get to 2% is worse than the disease," Engelke said.
Consumers wary
Consumer sentiment remains wary, according to the latest survey by the
In
"Consumer sentiment has reversed its long skid downward," Kassens, the research institute's senior analyst, said in an interview. "It's having trouble sustaining its upward growth."
People are traveling, based on statistics from the
"People are spending money like crazy," Kassens said.
However, spending depends on wealth, said
"These consumers generate a disproportionate share of spending and have been supported not only by rising asset values and incomes, but also growing confidence in the economy as well," Hsu said. "In contrast, the burden of high prices continues to drag down sentiment for less wealthy consumers."
Wages have increased, although different measures come to different conclusions about whether earnings are rising faster or slower than prices.
"People are out there acting like the economy is good, but if you ask them their sentiment, their sentiment is not good," said
"People tend to say, 'I'm doing well, but my neighbor must be doing worse,'" McNab said.
Housing costs
One clear problem remains for consumers: the cost of housing.
Lowering interest rates should make home mortgages more affordable, but it's not clear how much relief a quarter-point rate cut would provide to home buyers in a seller's market.
"It's a positive step, but I don't think it's a meaningful one, in terms of meaningfully affecting the housing market," said
McNab strongly agrees, advocating for local governments to encourage residential development instead of stifling it.
"We are behind," he said. "We are significantly behind."
The effect of high housing costs is clearest in
"Northern Virginians are either stopping in
The trend is driving up the cost of housing for people who already live in the
Housing represents more than one-third of the inflation rate, depending on the index, Kassens said. "It's the largest bill I pay every month."
Former President
"We're using our best thinking, we're doing our best to understand the economy, we follow academics, we follow the many commentators who bless us with their commentary, but we don't change anything in our approach to address other factors, like the political calendar," Powell said in a news conference after the board met on Wednesday.
How would a rate cut potentially affect the elections?
It shouldn't matter, said
"Either you want to help people or you don't, and this is what people have been begging for the last year and a half," Rozell said. "People have been pleading for interest rate cuts to stimulate the economy."
"It's not whether there is political gain for one party or the other," he said. "It's getting people the help they need."
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