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

Lincoln Way West Warriors Softball

Lincoln-Way East Outlasts Lincoln-Way West in 10-6 Conference Victory

Lincoln-Way East used a balanced and relentless offensive attack to secure a 10-6 victory over Lincoln-Way West in a high-scoring conference matchup on Friday. The game was a back-and-forth battle...
Bill to expel students over sexual assault progresses in Springfield

Bill to expel students over sexual assault progresses in Springfield

By Sean Reed | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A measure that would place new rules on Illinois schools requiring a full-year expulsion of a student...
Viral goose egg case fuels debate over abortion

Viral goose egg case fuels debate over abortion

By Catrina Barker | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A viral incident involving a suburban Chicago woman accused of taking protected goose eggs is drawing...
Another U.S.-Canada border bust: Gun smuggling operation

Another U.S.-Canada border bust: Gun smuggling operation

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square A gun smuggling operation run by Canadian, Pakistani and Jordanian citizens has been thwarted at the U.S.-Canada border, authorities said. While illegal border crosser crime...
More than 200 children rescued, 350 child sex offenders arrested in one month

More than 200 children rescued, 350 child sex offenders arrested in one month

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square More than 200 children were rescued and more than 350 child sex offenders arrested in one month in the latest Department of Justice targeted enforcement...
Trump budget targets 'valley of death' with new military contractor accountability model

Trump budget targets ‘valley of death’ with new military contractor accountability model

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square The Trump administration's $1.5 trillion military budget request would rewrite how the Pentagon buys weapons – forcing contractors to fund their own factory expansions and...
Nonprofit flies troops home for milestones they can't afford to miss

Nonprofit flies troops home for milestones they can’t afford to miss

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square For junior enlisted military members earning about $30,000 a year, the cost of a round-trip ticket home can be the difference between witnessing a family...
Report: 2025 third most violent year on record for American Jews

Report: 2025 third most violent year on record for American Jews

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square Last year was the third most violent year on record for American Jews, according to an analysis by the Anti-Defamation League (ADL). Although antisemitic incidents...
Screenshot 2026-05-05 at 1.46.14 PM

Meeting Summary and Briefs: Joliet Junior College Board of Trustees for April 15, 2026

Joliet Junior College Board of Trustees Meeting | April 15, 2026 The Joliet Junior College (JJC) Board of Trustees held a strictly ceremonial meeting on Wednesday evening after failing to...
Jackson Township Graphic.2 NEW

Meeting Summary and Briefs: Jackson Township Board for March 11, 2026

Jackson Township Board Meeting | March 11, 2026 The Jackson Township Board held a brief, 22-minute regular monthly meeting on Wednesday evening to process municipal expenditures, authorize administrative agendas, and...
International human smuggling ring exploiting Canadian visa system thwarted by US

International human smuggling ring exploiting Canadian visa system thwarted by US

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square Another international human smuggling ring exploiting lax Canadian border security and visa processes has been thwarted by U.S. officials. Mexican smuggling at the U.S.-Canada border...
Pro-life org: Informed consent for abortion pill impossible without doctor visit

Pro-life org: Informed consent for abortion pill impossible without doctor visit

By Tate RosentreterThe Center Square The nation’s largest pro-life organization filed an amicus brief Thursday in the U.S. Supreme Court asserting the impossibility of ensuring informed consent without an in-person...
Pro-life org: Informed consent for abortion pill impossible without doctor visit

Pro-life org: Informed consent for abortion pill impossible without doctor visit

By Tate RosentreterThe Center Square The nation’s largest pro-life organization filed an amicus brief Thursday in the U.S. Supreme Court asserting the impossibility of ensuring informed consent without an in-person...
Pro-life org: Informed consent for abortion pill impossible without doctor visit

Pro-life org: Informed consent for abortion pill impossible without doctor visit

By Tate RosentreterThe Center Square The nation’s largest pro-life organization filed an amicus brief Thursday in the U.S. Supreme Court asserting the impossibility of ensuring informed consent without an in-person...
Illinois Quick Hits: Swipe fee case returned to district court

Illinois Quick Hits: Swipe fee case returned to district court

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – The U.S. Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals has returned a case involving an Illinois law banning electronic...