Strong start to US economy this year


Positive signs: A customer at a grocery store in New York. Retail sales and inflation data showed US consumers remained robust at the start of the year, bolstered by the ample availability of jobs. — Reuters

NEW YORK: The economy proved resilient to start the new year, marked by steady consumer spending and stabilising manufacturing activity, contacts surveyed in the Federal Reserve’s (Fed) latest Beige Book say.

“Overall economic activity increased slightly in early 2023,” the Fed said in the report, published two weeks before each meeting of the policy-setting Federal Open Market Committee.

However, the outlook going forward is less optimistic.

“Amid heightened uncertainty, contacts did not expect economic conditions to improve much in the months ahead,” the report said, drawing from anecdotal information collected by the Fed’s 12 regional banks through Feb 27.

The comments support economic data that’s largely surprised to the upside so far in 2023, notably robust job growth that’s powered consumer spending.

Officials are looking to today’s employment data and next week’s consumer price index among key data that’ll help determine the path of policy.

Bloomberg Economics economist Eliza Winger said: “The Fed’s latest Beige Book showed uneven activity across districts, with half experiencing no change in economic activity and others seeing modest expansion.

“That’s precisely what the year ahead could bring – no uniform picture for the whole country and some regions more susceptible to a hard landing.”

The Beige Book, which was compiled by the New York Fed, comes at the conclusion of Fed chair Jerome Powell’s two-day testimony before Congress, in which he opened the door to the possibility of accelerating the pace of interest-rate hikes should economic data continue to come in strong while stressing that no decision on the March meeting has been made yet.

Policymakers have raised rates aggressively in the past year in an effort to curb inflation that stood at a 40-year high.

They slowed down the pace of rate hikes to a quarter point increase at their last meeting, bringing interest rates to a range of 4.5% to 4.75%.

Firms across the country indicated persistent price pressures, though some were abating. Many districts also noted continued wage growth and that a lack of child care is still keeping workers out of the labour force.

There were some glimmers of hope in both the outlook for inflation and the state of the labour market in the report.

Many districts saw supply-chain issues ease and reported relief in some transportation costs.

Firms said labour availability was improving slightly, but finding workers with the right skills or experience “remained challenging.”

A few districts saw “moderate to strong” retail sales growth during a period that is usually slow, echoed by Powell in his congressional testimony.

Retail sales and inflation data showed US consumers remained robust at the start of the year, bolstered by the ample availability of jobs.

Most districts saw strong travel and tourism activity, part of the services sector of the economy that excludes energy and housing, which has shown persistent strength and is worrying policymakers. — Bloomberg

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