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University of Michigan Consumer Confidence virtually unchanged in October to 71.7
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Consumer sentiment has remained virtually unchanged in the past three months, at levels comparable to the pandemic low point in April 2020, according to the University of Michigan Surveys of Consumers.
The positive impact of higher income expectations and the receding coronavirus has been offset by higher rates of inflation and falling confidence in government economic policies, said U-M economist Richard Curtin, director of the surveys.
Consumers not only anticipated the highest year-ahead inflation rate since 2008 in the October survey, but also expressed greater uncertainty about the year-ahead inflation rate than anytime in nearly 40 years. Declining living standards due to rising inflation were mentioned by 1 in every 5 households, concentrated among older and poorer households, Curtin said.
“The patterns of consumers’ reactions to surging inflation represent the preconditions that can promote an escalating inflation rate in the year ahead,” he said. “Consumers’ recognition of rising prices is near universal, so too is their desire to reestablish spending for a more traditional holiday season.
“People understand that inflation has been due to upheavals in supply lines and labor markets. The lower resistance to higher prices due in part to incentive swollen savings, and is matched by less resistance among sellers to hiking prices to cover higher materials and labor costs. Combined with greater fiscal stimulus, these reactions will accelerate future rates of inflation.”
Inflation drives widespread declines in living standards
Expected increases in nominal incomes rose to 2.6% in October, up from 1.5% last month. The last time a higher income gain was expected across all households was in 2007.
Unfortunately, the year-ahead rate of inflation was expected to be 4.8%, the highest level since 2008, Curtin said. As a result, when asked about expected inflation-adjusted income gains during the year ahead, twice as many households anticipated real income declines as increases. Across age, income and education subgroups, only those under age 45 expected real income gains.
Price hikes dim spending outlook
Although consumers anticipated that the economy will continue to improve, the pace of gains were expected to slow. When asked about what news they had heard about the economy, twice as many consumers reported unfavorable development than favorable, whereas six months ago they reported positive and negative news equally.
When asked whether the gains would usher in good economic times, the majority judged it would still constitute bad times for the year ahead (56%), and over the longer term, growth would be interrupted by renewed downturns (57%). As a result, unemployment was expected to fall by 37%, down from 52% three months ago.
Consumer Sentiment Index
The Consumer Sentiment Index posted a small decline in October, retreating to 71.7 from last month’s 72.8, and falling to just below the pandemic low of 71.8. The Expectations Index fell to 67.9 from last month’s 68.1 and was well below last year’s 79.2. The Current Conditions Index posted a larger loss in October, falling to 77.7 from last month’s 80.1 and last year’s 85.9. The decline reflects the negative impact of higher inflation on household budgets.
Consumer sentiment remained virtually unchanged from its mid month reading, gaining just 0.3 Index points, and just 0.1 Index points above the average in the past two months, and only 0.1 Index points below the April 2020 low. The positive impact of higher income expectations and the receding coronavirus has been offset by higher rates of inflation and falling confidence in government economic policies. Consumers not only anticipated the highest year-ahead inflation rate since 2008 in the October survey, consumers also expressed greater uncertainty about the year-ahead inflation rate than anytime in nearly forty years (see the chart). Note that this was the first major spike in inflation uncertainty recorded outside of a recession. Even uncertainty about the long-term inflation rate was the highest in more than a decade. Declining living standards due to inflation were spontaneously mentioned by one-of-every five households, concentrated among older and poorer households.
The patterns of consumers' reactions to recent rises in inflation represent the preconditions that can promote an escalating inflation rate during the year ahead. Consumers' recognition of high and rising prices is near universal, so too is their desire to reestablish spending for a more traditional holiday season. People understand that the origin of inflation has been in the upheavals in supply lines and labor markets. The acceptance of higher prices was caused by swollen savings due to the record pandemic cash incentives as well as by Biden's new social support programs. The declining resistance to price hikes among buyers will be joined by less resistance among sellers to hiking prices that will be justified by higher materials and labor costs. These reactions promote an accelerating inflation rate until a tipping point is reached when consumers' incomes can no longer keep pace with escalating inflation. In the past inflationary era, one recession was insufficient to realign expectations; it required a series of boom-bust cycles, until the Fed's Volcker finally defeated inflation by raising interest rates to record levels.
Posted: October 29, 2021 Friday 10:00 AM