If the economy were just a snapshot, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell should put the current one on his mantle. Strong 2.8% second-quarter economic growth and calmer inflation are the soft landing conditions that should at least temporarily win the Fed some plaudits for its handling of the current inflationary cycle. A first cut, opens new tab of the cycle at the Fed’s meeting in September appears to be right on time. But high rates aren’t sparing the economy—by the time the Fed starts to change course, a worsening unemployment and consumption picture could put the U.S. recovery at risk.
Throughout 2024, Powell has handled waves of skepticism from both sides of the rate debate. Those wary of resurgent prices found ammunition in spring inflation readings that showed stubborn pressures, especially in the housing sector. Others pushing for cuts sounded the alarm as unemployment ticked up to 4.1% in June from half-century lows of 3.4% in January 2023.
Particularly in recent weeks, lower inflation has helped make the case for the Fed to lower rates before September, specifically at their meeting next week. Former New York Fed President Bill Dudley penned a Bloomberg op-ed this week with the headline “I Changed My Mind, opens new tab," citing tamed prices. He also raised the issue of unemployment, highlighting the so-called “Sahm Rule,” an economic indicator that says that if the unemployment rate rises 0.5 percentage points from its low point in the prior 12 months, a recession is on the way.
Currently, unemployment is 0.43 percentage point from its past-year low. Crucially, when the 0.5 percentage point threshold is breached, the minimum rise has historically been around 2 percentage points. While the job market's cracks have only emerged slowly, the Sahm rule's threshold is meant to spot tipping points. Higher unemployment would lead to weaker wage growth, as employers quickly realize they have leverage. With credit card debt levels already ramping up, people may quickly pull back spending. Suddenly Powell’s perfect economic image looks blurry.
The challenge for Powell is that it is hard to find the perfect moment to zoom in on rate cuts. If the American shopper remains employed, patience is fine. If not, the summer will just be a sepia-toned memory for the Fed.
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CONTEXT NEWS
The Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge, the personal-consumption expenditures index, rose 2.5% over the past year through June, according to the U.S. Commerce Department on July 26. Gross domestic product growth rose 2.8%, more than economists expected, in the second quarter, buoyed by consumer spending, according to the agency a day earlier.
The Federal Reserve will meet next from July 30 to July 31. While they are not expected to cut the federal funds rate at that meeting, Chairman Jerome Powell and other policymakers have signaled that a September cut is on the table.
 A U.S. judge has blocked a Department of Labor rule from taking effect that would have expanded the types of retirement advisers who are considered fiduciaries, finding the rule was arbitrary and conflicted with a law that governs retirement plans.
The rule, unveiled in April as the "Retirement Security Rule," was challenged by insurance groups who argued it conflicted with ERISA, or the Employee Retirement Income Security Act.
Judge Jeremy Kernodle in Tyler, Texas, said in a Thursday ruling that the Federation of Americans for Consumer Choice Inc and other insurance groups were likely to prevail in their arguments. He blocked the rule nationally from taking effect on Sept. 23 while the lawsuit plays out.
The insurance groups had argued the rule improperly treated as fiduciaries those who provide one-time recommendations to retirees, such as for rolling over investments from an ERISA plan to an individual retirement account, or IRA.
The Labor Department said in a statement that the rule ensures retirement savings advice is in the best interest of the customer, not of the financial professional. "The department continues to believe that this rule is essential to ensuring that retirement investors are protected," the DOL statement said.
The rule was meant to close a loophole in the fiduciary standard that did not apply to recommendations for purchases of non-securities such as fixed index annuities, which are typically sold by insurance companies, according to the White House.
Investments in such annuities are attractive to risk-averse investors and have grown rapidly but also come with higher costs. The White House estimated the fiduciary rule could have saved retirees $5 billion a year on such investments.
Business groups have been using the courts to chip away at regulatory power and won a major Supreme Court victory in June in a case known as Loper Bright, which held that judges should not defer to an agency's interpretation of an ambiguous law.
Kernodle said as a result of Loper Bright, he did not owe deference to the Labor Department's interpretation of ERISA.
The Labor Department tried to expand the fiduciary rule in 2016, under the administration of Democratic President Barack Obama. That effort was blocked by the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in 2018 and Kernodle said the latest version of the fiduciary rule fails for many of the same reasons.

A key question is looming for Vice President Kamala Harris as she edges closer to gaining the Democratic presidential nomination: Can she turn the Biden-Harris economic record into a political advantage in a way that President Joe Biden failed to do?

In some ways, her task would seem straightforward: The administration oversaw a vigorous rebound from the pandemic recession, one that shrank the U.S. unemployment rate to a half-century low of 3.4% in early 2023 — far below the painful 6.4% rate when Biden and Harris took office in 2021. The rate stayed below 4% for more than two years, the longest such stretch since the 1960s.

Boosted by the administration’s $1.9 trillion stimulus package, robust economic growth sent demand for workers soaring, forcing employers to jack up wages. Paychecks rose particularly fast for lower-paid workers, thereby narrowing income inequality.

Soon, though, clogged supply chains caused parts shortages, as demand for furniture, cars, and other goods, juiced by the administration’s stimulus, soared. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine escalated gas and food prices. In June 2022, inflation reached a four-decade high.

The spike in prices was so severe that it offset most of the wage growth that workers had enjoyed. And it soured Americans on the economy. Consumer sentiment plunged in late 2021 and has barely recovered even as inflation has plummeted from 9.1% in 2022 to 3%.

A wide gap has opened up between the public’s dim view of the economy and the generally positive data on jobs, falling inflation and economic growth. Chris Jackson, head of polling at Ipsos Public Affairs, said he blames the cumulative jump in average prices over the past three years — roughly 20%, only partly offset by higher paychecks — and a general unease about the country’s direction.

“People are, generally speaking, doing OK,” Jackson said. “They have their jobs, they’re getting paid, they’ve seen pay raises — all those sort of things. And yet they don’t feel like their dollars go as far. They feel like the country is not going in a good direction, just in general.”

Former President Donald Trump is campaigning hard on the higher cost of living, having mentioned inflation 14 times in his speech last week at the Republican National Convention. His running mate, Sen. JD Vance of Ohio, has attacked Biden over the surge in housing costs, which has diminished the hopes of many would-be home buyers.

Speaking this week in Indianapolis, Harris highlighted her support for “affordable health care” and “affordable child care.” She also charged that Trump would eliminate the Biden administration’s price cap on insulin, which the White House often cites as an example of its efforts to reduce high drug costs.

Even though inflation — the rate of price increases — has sharply slowed over the past two years, Americans remain unhappy that average prices are much higher than they were just a few years ago. Grocery prices are up 21% since Biden and Harris took office. Average apartment rents have climbed about 23%, to $1,411 a month, according to Apartment List.

And to fight inflation, the Federal Reserve, led by Chair Jerome Powell, raised its key interest rate at the fastest pace in four decades. Borrowing costs soared as a result. The average 30-year fixed mortgage rate has more than doubled, from a low of about 2.7% during the pandemic to about 6.8% last week.

The combined increase in prices and inflation has been particularly jarring for many families because it followed nearly a decade of little-to-no inflation and ultra-low interest rates. America’s households grew used to prices barely rising. From 2015 until the pandemic, for example, U.S. food prices were basically flat. When high inflation eventually did strike, it both bruised Americans’ finances and darkened their economic outlook.

Still, many leading policymakers see the Fed’s sharp boost in interest rates, and the subsequent fall in inflation, as an economic success story. When the Fed began aggressively raising rates, making consumer and business loans much costlier, the widespread fear was that the United States would soon tumble into a recession. In August 2022, Powell issued a high-profile warning that the Fed’s inflation fight would “bring some pain to households and businesses.”

Instead, inflation has fallen without a sharp rise in unemployment, which is at a still-low 4.1%. And Fed officials have indicated that they’re increasingly confident that inflation is declining steadily toward their 2% target.

Christopher Waller, an influential member of the Fed’s governing board, celebrated that progress in remarks last week.

“We’ve never really seen this in terms of a severe policy tightening,” Waller said, referring to the Fed’s rate hikes. “The economy just kind of held its ground. And inflation came down a lot. This has been an amazing recovery from what happened in ‘21 and ’22.”

Yet many everyday Americans aren’t sharing in the enthusiasm as they grapple with still-high costs. New car prices, for example, jumped 24% in the three years after the pandemic, to an average of $48,000. They have largely leveled off in the past year, according to government data. But on Thursday, General Motors said that customers paid an average of nearly $50,000 for one of its new cars in the April to June quarter.

Perhaps most painfully, housing affordability has worsened. Both prices and mortgage rates are much higher than they were three years ago. The monthly payment for a newly purchased median-priced home has jumped nearly one-third in that time, to more than $3,000, according to Harvard’s Joint Center for Housing Studies. Would-be homebuyers need to earn at least $100,000 to afford the median-priced home in nearly half of all metro areas, the center has found.

Abigail Wozniak, director of the Opportunity and Growth Institute at the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, said the burden of such major purchases becomes harder to manage when overall prices spike.

“It’s difficult to change your consumption” of cars and homes “in little amounts quickly,” Wozniak said. “You’re forced to think about this big budget choice of, should I give up a car and substitute into transit? That’s a huge adjustment. And adjustments are painful.”

Then there are groceries. A pound of ground beef has jumped $1.05 since Biden’s inauguration, to a national average of $5.36 a pound, according to government data. Though egg prices are far below the peak they reached during a bout of avian flu in late 2022, at $2.72 a dozen they’re still 85% more expensive than they were three years ago. A pound of chicken has surged 25% to $2.01 since January 2021.

Economists at the Biden administration have calculated, though, that average wages have risen enough to make up for the higher costs. As of June, average hourly pay was 23% higher than it was four years earlier — larger than the 21% jump in average prices. As a result, the White House economists calculated, it now takes about 3.6 hours of work for a typical employee to buy a week’s worth of groceries, about the same as it did before the pandemic.

Economists say this is how it’s supposed to work: After an inflationary burst, prices won’t fall back to their previous levels. Such sustained price drops typically occur only during recessions. In a healthy economy, wages eventually rise enough for consumers to afford the higher costs.

By some measures, lower-income workers have fared particularly well, a result of the difficulty employers faced after the pandemic in filling many in-person jobs. Wages for restaurant and hotel workers soared nearly 15% in the spring of 2022 from a year earlier — much faster than the inflation rate.

Yet overall household income hasn’t grown as fast as hourly pay. That can happen if fewer people in a household work or if their hours are cut.

Economists at Motio Research have calculated that since Biden was inaugurated in January 2021, inflation-adjusted median household incomes have risen just 1.6% to $79,000. (The median represents a midpoint and filters out extremely high or low numbers that can skew averages.)

“So if half of the population, at least, see their income stagnating for four years, you can understand why inflation is being identified as a huge problem here,” said Matias Scaglione, a co-founder of Motio.

Employee engagement might be on the mend.  

According to a first quarter report from analytics and advisory firm Gallup, just 30 percent of workers were "fully engaged at work," as "the involvement and enthusiasm of employees in their work and workplace" reached an 11-year low.

But in the year's second quarter, engagement ticked up to 32 percent, which was on par with levels from 2022, according to Gallup's latest update

This translates to about 3.2 million more engaged workers since the end of last year, says Jim Harter, chief workplace scientist at Gallup. "They're coming to work more involved and enthusiastic," Harter says, "and I think that's really good for organizations."  

It's also an encouraging departure from a downward trend in engagement that persisted through 2021 and 2022, according to Gallup's reports. The 11-year nadir at the beginning of this year was the culmination of notable declines in employees' job satisfaction and role clarity, as well as workers' diminished connection to employers' mission and purpose, per Gallup. Younger and fully remote employees were particularly affected.  

The current turnaround, while slight, reflects several key improvements, Gallup maintained. In Q2, more employees strongly agreed about "knowing what's expected at work; having materials and equipment to do work right; and having an opportunity to do what employees do best."

To Harter, it's an indication that companies could be "settling in" to new ways of working,  including hybrid and remote schedules.

In particular, the younger and fully remote employees who were most disaffected in Q1 saw engagement gains last quarter. Breaking this down, the number of remote workers reporting that they were highly engaged increased by five points; and younger workers who strongly agreed that they "have the ability to do what they do best" increased by six points. 

In the second quarter, those were the biggest positive changes across any demographic -- with more improved sentiment than anything reported by fully on-site workers or hybrid workers.

Among younger workers, the number of Gen Z employees who strongly agreed that they had the ability to do what they do best shot up nine points. The frequency with which they reported "receiving meaningful feedback" also increased by eight points.  

In addition to sentiment gains for these Gen Zers and remote talent, the share of overall employees who reported receiving meaningful feedback within a week of being surveyed increased four points from the last report.

At 23 percent of those surveyed, this remains low relative to other criteria. But it's notable, as Gallup previously shared, because "a manager having one meaningful conversation per week with each team member develops high-performance relationships more than any other leadership activity."  

Gains here could be the result of more real support from higher-ups, Harter says. Managers' and leaders' engagement increased by 3 points and 4 points, respectively, as both groups indicated increased clarity about their own expectations. As Gallup has reported, 70 percent of the "variance in team engagement is determined solely by the manager."  

"When managers' jobs are difficult, it's a lot more difficult for them to instinctively reach out," Harter says. 

It's too soon to say how the trend in engagement will continue from here, Harter says, but he's optimistic. "I actually think that workplaces could be in the best shape ever if we combine this new desire for autonomy that workers have realized with great managing," he says, "but it's going to take some upskilling."