Analysis: Americans say they hate the economy but act like they love it
Something doesn’t add up. And that something has a lot to do with the nation’s first inflation scare in decades.
Simply put, the cost of living is going up, and Americans aren’t happy about it. Inflation is overshadowing real bright spots in the US economy.
“The economic news is generally good. But inflation is in your face, every day. Some of the most visible prices are up and that makes it seem like the inflation problem is worse than it is,” said Gus Faucher, chief economist at PNC.
“People say they are not feeling great about the economy — yet they are spending,” said Aneta Markowska, chief economist at Jefferies. “I just don’t fully believe what the confidence reports are telling us.”
Ultimately, if Americans keep spending, then this confidence problem is much more of a political problem for President Joe Biden — as opposed to an economic one.
Show of confidence: Workers are quitting like never before
Of course, it’s important to note that different people are experiencing different things in today’s economy — especially given all the shockwaves set off by Covid. Some parts of the economy hit the hardest by the pandemic, including the travel industry, are still struggling to recover.
Although there were concerns about a summer slowdown in hiring, revisions show the government dramatically underestimated job growth between June and September.
The Labor Department marked up its original forecast by a total of 626,000 jobs over that span.
At the same time, a record 4.4 million Americans quit their jobs in September, clear evidence of how much leverage workers have in today’s economy.
Biggest price spike since 1990
None of this is to say that inflation isn’t a real challenge. It is.
Americans do not like high gas prices, and they have a long history of blaming whoever is in the White House, fair or not.
Wages are going up sharply amid a war for talent among companies. Yet wages are often not going up by enough to offset higher consumer prices.
Republicans vs. Democrats
The deeply polarized state of America may be amplifying these inflationary concerns.
But politics likely does not tell the whole story here.
And consider that consumer sentiment among Democrats stands at 87 today. That’s only slightly better than the low-80s readings in early 2017 after former President Donald Trump took office.
‘Big shock to the system’
Another part of the problem is that many Americans have never lived through a period of sticker shock before. Inflation was unusually subdued for the past dozen years, so tame that many economists feared a Japanese-style deflationary spiral that would be hard to get out of.
“Inflation is something that a lot of people have not experienced in their lifetimes. It’s a big shock to the system,” said Markowska, the Jefferies analyst.
The ironic thing about these inflation fears: A big part of the reason inflation is here today is because demand is booming as the economy recovers from Covid faster than many imagined possible back in March 2020.
Inflation wouldn’t be a problem if the US economy was experiencing something like the painfully slow recovery from the Great Recession.
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