Monthly Global Economic Report

FOMC - Navigating by the Stars under Cloudy Skies

After the FOMC meeting on November 7 Chair Powell began the press conference with an opening statement that presented a review of the progress monetary policy had achieved in the last two years. “The Fed has been assigned two goals for monetary policy—maximum employment and stable prices. We remain committed to supporting maximum employment and bringing inflation sustainably to our 2 percent goal. We continue to be confident that with an appropriate recalibration of our policy stance, strength in the economy and the labor market can be maintained, with inflation moving sustainably down to 2 percent.”

“We see the risks to achieving our employment and inflation goals as being roughly in balance, and we are attentive to the risks to both sides of our mandate. In the labor market, conditions remain solid. Overall, a broad set of indicators suggests that conditions in the labor market are now less tight than just before the pandemic in 2019. The labor market is not a source of significant inflationary pressures. Inflation has eased significantly over the past two years and has moved much closer to our 2 percent longer-run goal, but core inflation remains somewhat elevated.”

Chair Powell is correct that inflation has eased significantly since peaking in 2022, but the majority of the progress occurred in 2023 as the table below highlights. The Headline Personal Consumption Expenditures Index (PCE) declined from 5.4% in January 2023 to 2.6% in December, and the Core PCE dropped from 4.6% to 2.9% at the end of 2023.

In 2024 the progress was far more muted. The Headline PCE fell to 2.1% in September 2024 from 2.6% in December 2023, and the Core PCE fell to 2.7% from 2.9%. The improvement in the Consumer Price Index (CPI) for 2023 and 2024 was similar. The Headline CPI dropped from 6.36% in January 2023 to 3.32% in December and 2.6% in October 2024. The Core CPI declined from 5.54% in January 2023 to 3.91% in December and 3.3% in October 2024. Furthermore, the monthly change for the Headline PCE since June 2024 has ticked up from 0.10% to 0.18% in September as the Core rose from 0.10% to 0.25%. The Headline CPI increased from -0.07% to +0.24% in October and the Core has ticked up to 0.28% from 0.17% in June. It certainly looks like inflation has been sticky in 2024 compared to the dramatic improvement in 2023.