Everyday Economics: Inflation squeezes household spending

Everyday Economics: Inflation squeezes household spending

Spread the love

The Fed held rates where they were – 3.5% to 3.75% – and nobody was surprised. What actually mattered was the friction inside the room. Three FOMC members dissented, and not over some technical disagreement. They wanted the committee to stop pretending its next move is still a cut.They have a point. The “easing bias” language is a holdover from late last year, when the Fed was more worried about the labor market cracking than inflation flaring back up. In December, officials cut rates and talked about calibrating “the extent and timing of additional adjustments.” That framing made sense then. It makes less sense now.Inflation is back.Core PCE – the Fed’s preferred measure – came in at 0.3% for March, putting the year-over-year rate at 3.2%. Headline PCE jumped 0.7% on the month and 3.5% from a year ago, the biggest annual print in nearly three years. A lot of that is energy – oil prices spiked on Middle East tensions – but core is still running well above target. You can’t hand-wave that away.This puts the Fed in a genuinely awkward spot. Hiking rates won’t pump more oil out of the ground or bring gas prices down. But cutting while inflation is this elevated sends exactly the wrong message. So the Fed sits. It doesn’t need to rush to rescue the labor market right now, but it can’t pretend inflation has been handled either.The GDP picture fits the same pattern. The economy grew 2% annualized in Q1, which sounds decent until you dig in. Business investment – a lot of it AI-related – and a bounce in government spending after last year’s shutdown carried most of the load. Consumers are pulling back. Residential investment is still soft. The economy is growing, but households are doing more with less because prices haven’t let up.Two reports this week deserve attention: new home sales and the April jobs number.The housing data are a useful gut check on consumer confidence. People don’t buy homes when they’re nervous about the future – and mortgage rates were already a headwind before any of this. Builders are dealing with higher financing costs for incentive programs, softening prices (Zillow’s data show a small drop in median price per square foot for new construction), and growing competition from resale inventory. It’s getting harder to move product.But the jobs report is the one that actually moves the needle.March looked fine on the surface – 178,000 jobs added, recovering from February’s revised 133,000 loss. Look closer and the picture was murkier. January got revised up, February got revised down, and together those two months lost another 7,000 on net. The trend is not accelerating.Here’s the catch: the unemployment rate can stay low even when hiring is sluggish, as long as fewer people are looking for work. That’s not a tight labor market – it’s a shrinking one. A smaller labor force, absent a productivity miracle, means a smaller economy over time.Claims data muddy the waters further. Initial claims dropped to 189,000 last week – the lowest since 1969. That sounds explosive. But it probably reflects a labor market where layoffs are low and the pool of insured unemployed workers is simply smaller. Companies aren’t cutting aggressively, but they’re not exactly on a hiring binge either.So what does Friday’s report tell us? If payrolls come in modest and unemployment holds low on weak participation, the Fed has no reason to move. If employment actually falls, the conversation shifts fast. The base case is a labor market that’s stable but not strong. The tail risk – low probability but real – is a re-acceleration, especially if wages start running hot again. That would put rate hikes back on the agenda in a hurry.For now, the Fed is caught between inflation that’s too stubborn and a labor market that’s no longer clearly falling apart. The result: no hike, no cut, no urgency. Just waiting for the data to break the stalemate.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Feds raid more than 20 sites in Minneapolis in fraud probe

Feds raid more than 20 sites in Minneapolis in fraud probe

By Elyse ApelThe Center Square Federal authorities executed search warrants at more than 20 locations across the Twin Cities on Tuesday, including several connected to or offering childcare. Tuesday morning,...
State legislative investigation: Camp Mystic created 'complacent flood culture'

State legislative investigation: Camp Mystic created ‘complacent flood culture’

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square The first findings of a state legislative investigation into the deaths that occurred at Camp Mystic, in Hunt, Texas, last July, were presented in a...
VA performance improves as concerns over cuts fade, survey finds

VA performance improves as concerns over cuts fade, survey finds

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square A year after veterans expressed concern over proposed Department of Veterans Affairs workforce reductions, a new survey finds care quality and overall performance have held...
Illinois Senate to consider megaprojects after Pritzker calls out amusement tax

Illinois Senate to consider megaprojects after Pritzker calls out amusement tax

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A proposed stadium for the Chicago Bears and other megaprojects are expected to be up for discussion...
EXCLUSIVE: SPLC called on to remove parental rights groups from its ‘hate map’

EXCLUSIVE: SPLC called on to remove parental rights groups from its ‘hate map’

By Tate MillerThe Center Square An Illinois-based parental rights group sent an open letter to the Southern Poverty Law Center requesting that it remove parental rights organizations from its “hate...
Illinois Quick Hits: Driver killed in reported shootout with police on I-88

Illinois Quick Hits: Driver killed in reported shootout with police on I-88

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A man is dead after a reported exchange of gunfire with police on Interstate 88 in DeKalb...
Joseph House

Historic Joseph Perry House in Crete Granted Landmark Status

Will County Board Meeting | April 16, 2026 Article Summary: The Will County Board officially designated the Joseph Ferris Perry House in Crete Township as a historical landmark, protecting the...
U.S. House to vote on five-year Farm Bill this week

U.S. House to vote on five-year Farm Bill this week

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square The House Rules Committee debated long into Monday night to prepare the five-year farm bill for a floor vote this week. Lawmakers have filed over...
Constitutional tests await IL Dems’ race-based district plan

Constitutional tests await IL Dems’ race-based district plan

By Jonathan Bilyk | Legal NewslineThe Center Square Later this fall, Illinois voters appear likely to get the chance to vote on a plan to rewrite the state constitution to...
State House OKs access to abortion medication at colleges

State House OKs access to abortion medication at colleges

By Chris WoodwardThe Center Square The Colorado House on Monday approved a bill allowing for the access of abortion medication on college campuses. House Bill 1335 is sponsored by Reps....
Nonprofit hospitals called out for prioritizing politics over patients

Nonprofit hospitals called out for prioritizing politics over patients

By Tate MillerThe Center Square Consumer protection organization Consumers’ Research launched a campaign to warn Congress about nonprofit hospitals that prioritize "woke" politics such as diversity, equity and inclusion, transgender...
Americans back birthright citizenship 2-to-1, poll finds

Americans back birthright citizenship 2-to-1, poll finds

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square A majority of U.S. adults say children born in the country should automatically get citizenship, according to a new poll published as the U.S. Supreme...
frankfort township graphic

Frankfort Township Prepares for Spring Services, AARP Tax Prep Expansion, and New Food Pantry

Frankfort Township Board Meeting | March 9, 2026 Article Summary: Frankfort Township officials announced upcoming spring branch pickup, progress on the new food pantry, and the potential expansion of the highly...
Roy leads congressional delegation calling to halt federal funding for CAIR

Roy leads congressional delegation calling to halt federal funding for CAIR

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square Outgoing U.S. Rep. Chip Roy, R-Texas, is again calling on the federal government to take action against the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), this time...
Marilyn Monroe's home becomes a monument; owners sue

Marilyn Monroe’s home becomes a monument; owners sue

By Chris WoodwardThe Center Square Marilyn Monroe's home is the subject of a federal lawsuit against the city of Los Angeles. Brinah Milstein and Roy Bank purchased the property in...