Economic strength is forcing the Fed to get more aggressive

On Tuesday, we learned U.S. employers had a record 11.5 million job openings as of March. That’s arguably the clearest sign that the economy is booming, as hiring workers isn’t cheap and most employers would only do it if they didn’t already have the staff to keep up with demand.

Currently, there are just 5.9 million people who are unemployed. In other words, there are nearly two job openings per unemployed person. The mismatch means that workers have a lot of options, which means they have a lot of leverage to ask for more pay. Indeed, employers are paying up at a historic rate.

But booming demand, record job openings, and higher wages… are bad?

The Federal Reserve and many in the economics profession are not putting it so bluntly. But that’s effectively their message.

The state of play: Demand for goods and services has been significantly outpacing supply,1 which has been sending inflation to decades-high rates. This is partly due to the fact that higher wages mean higher costs for businesses, many of which have been raising prices to preserve profitability. Ironically, these higher wages have helped bolster the already-strong finances of consumers, who are willingly paying up and thereby essentially enabling businesses to keep raising prices.

It’s important to add that this booming demand has been bolstered by job creation (i.e., a phenomenon where someone goes from earning nothing to earning something). In fact, the U.S. has created a whopping 2.1 million jobs in 2022 so far.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics has a metric called the index of aggregate weekly payrolls, which is the product of jobs, wages, and hours worked. It’s a rough proxy for the total nominal spending capacity of the workforce. This metric was up 10% year-over-year in April and has been above 9.5% since April 2021. Before the pandemic, it was trending at around 5%.

This combination of job growth and wage growth has only been exacerbating the inflation problem.

And so the best solution, at this point, seems to be to tighten monetary policy so that financial conditions become a little more challenging, which should cause demand to cool, which in turn should alleviate some of these persistent inflationary pressures.

In other words, the Fed is working to take the legs out of some of the good news coming from the economy because that good news is actually bad.2

The Fed moves to trim ‘excess demand’ 🦅

In a widely-anticipated move, the Fed raised short-term interest rates on Wednesday by 50 basis points to a range of 0.75% to 1.00%. It was the largest increase the central bank made in a single announcement since May 2000.