OPERATING WITH LIMITED DATA
The following information was released by the
President,
Highlights:
We have been operating with limited government data. The good news is that we arent navigating blind. We have other ways to keep a pulse on the economy.
On net, we are seeing pressure on both sides of our mandate, with inflation above our target and job growth down.
We also see mitigants on both sides, with consumer pushback and productivity improvements limiting inflation and labor supply slowing at roughly the same pace as labor demand, reducing the hit to unemployment.
Thank you for that kind introduction. I thought I would share my sense of the economy today and where it may be headed. These are my thoughts only and not those of anyone else on the
I like analogies, so Ive been describing operating with limited data as trying to bring a boat to shore in the pitch black and having the lighthouse go dark. You can assume youre on the same course for a short while. You can try to navigate by lantern. But you cant ignore the fact that you dont have much visibility, you might lose your bearings and there may be hazards up ahead.
The good news is that we arent navigating blind. We have other ways to keep a pulse on the economy. Private sector data help. For the most part, they aren't as definitive nor as calibrated, but they can highlight big shifts in economic conditions. In addition, the Fed benefits from collecting real-time information directly from the communities we serve.
The Richmond Fed set up our extensive outreach efforts because we recognized that even government data has its drawbacks. Its backward-looking. Its revised multiple times. Its aggregated, so it often doesnt capture underlying nuance. To address these gaps, each year my outreach team connects with thousands of business and community leaders; this year, we are on track to meet with about 4,000. We get thousands more responses through our regional surveys of business activity, as well as
This outreach helps us understand the economy better, as well as anticipate turning points we might otherwise miss. In 2020, businesses in
So, let me share what the official data had been telling us, what the private data are suggesting, and what my team is hearing.
Demand remains healthy. The last official data, from August, showed a year-over-year increase in real consumer spending of 2.7 percent. Retail sales grew a strong 0.6 percent from July. Driven by artificial intelligence (AI), business investment was robust. Since then, private data havent signaled much change. Credit and debit card spending remains solid, in the context of low unemployment and buoyant markets. Third quarter earnings and earnings outlooks came in well, suggesting continued support for investment. The elevated uncertainty that businesses perceived earlier in the year seems to be abating.
But in our outreach, the feel is very different by sector. If you build data centers, or provide energy, or sell to higher-income customers, or trade on
Turning to the labor market, while the unemployment rate has ticked up this year, it was still historically low at 4.3 percent through August. Employment growth, on the other hand, is soft. Weve been describing a low-hire, low-fire environment with three-month average job growth at a modest 29,000, but layoffs (as signaled by initial jobless claims) stable and low. Private sector metrics havent suggested much change. Job postings have drifted down. Jobs growth as reported by ADP remains muted, coming in at 42,000 in October. We have kept access to initial claims data from the states, and they havent moved meaningfully.
Our outreach suggests a somewhat weaker labor market than these numbers suggest. If you ask businesses how they see the labor market today, they say, balanced. But as they describe that balance in more detail, it doesnt seem so. With the exception of skilled trades, labor feels quite available with plenty of quality applicants per opening. Recent layoff announcements by sizable firms like Amazon, Verizon, and Target give additional cause for caution.
I will note it is a challenge to calibrate how much impact slower job growth will have on the unemployment rate, because we have been witnessing a rapid drop in the growth of labor supply. My generation is aging out of the workforce, and net immigration is declining.
Inflation is still above target. The last CPI print shows 12-month headline and core inflation at 3 percent through September. That likely translates to PCE inflation almost a full point above our 2 percent target. On the positive side, shelter price growth is easing, and oil prices remain low; on the other hand, goods price growth has remained higher than its recent norms, and we are seeing some pressure in non-housing core services like insurance. We unfortunately have fewer quality alternative data sources for inflation, as it is easier to monitor the price of coffee than to assess the mix of price changes across the entire consumer basket.
Our outreach leads me to believe inflation remains somewhat elevated but isnt likely to increase much. Our survey respondents expect higher growth in prices than they did before the pandemic. Where meaningful, they tell us tariff and other input cost pressures need to get passed on. At the same time, we hear customers are exhausted by ever-increasing prices. This isnt 2022 when stimulus, COVID-era savings, and rapid wage growth fueled revenge spending. Today in the context of weak sentiment we hear consumers are trading down, pushing back on higher prices by moving to private label, repairing rather than replacing, and shopping at value-priced retailers. We also hear they are trading off, maybe paying for a new phone by forgoing a vacation.
Increased productivity may also be giving businesses the ability to offset input cost increases. Businesses caught short workers after the pandemic invested in labor-saving technology, process redesign, and more sophisticated staffing models. They may be reaping the rewards now. The recent drop in turnover may be making newer employees more productive. Firms that choose not to hire are naturally increasing their productivity as output grows with lower headcount. Some sectors tell us they are benefitting from the elimination of unnecessary regulation. Notice I made it this far without mentioning the two omnipresent letters:
So, on net, we are seeing pressure on both sides of our mandate, with inflation above our target and job growth down. But we also see mitigants on both sides, with consumer pushback and productivity improvements limiting inflation and labor supply slowing at roughly the same pace as labor demand, reducing the hit to unemployment.
This brings me to policy. When the lighthouse goes dark, you might remain on your preexisting path at first, but soon enough, you will want to throttle back until you get more visibility. Thats not a particularly comfortable place to be, so I am looking forward to some illumination, from the data as it returns or from our outreach. You may notice nothing I just said gives any guidance for our next meeting. Thats intentional, as I think we have a lot to learn between now and then.
In times like this, I look for guidance from you. I want to know how your businesses are doing and what you are planning in terms of investment, hiring, layoffs, compensation and pricing. In some ways, these uncharted waters feel like the information challenge we faced during the pandemic; thats why I worked so hard in that period to stay close to so many contacts across the
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