Inflation in the US is improving, the public mood is still sour

By Howard Schneider

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - As families in the U.S. prepare to gather for their Thanksgiving dinners next week, food prices have largely flatlined for months, gasoline prices are about 10% lower than a year ago, and the average cost of much of what goes into a shopping cart has been roughly unchanged for a year.

But the steady ebbing of inflation hasn't translated into good news for either President Joe Biden or the Federal Reserve when it comes to public opinion. Attitudes towards both have kept slipping in light of one unchanging fact: Stuff remains pricier than it was before the coronavirus pandemic, and will likely stay that way.

"Inflation falls ... but prices don't come down. They're just going up at a slower rate," Fed Governor Christopher Waller said last week when asked at a research conference about common public misconceptions. "What people have in their mind right now is ... prices to go back to where they were in 2021. That's not going to happen. These prices are probably there forever."

The White House and the Fed got some good news on Tuesday when the latest inflation data showed that prices overall did not increase between September and October, a rare reprieve from the steady climb that has cut about 15% from the U.S. dollar's purchasing power since Biden took office in early 2021.

There are reasons, too, to think inflation might continue to ease.

Though housing cost increases are proving more persistent than expected, economists at the Fed and on Wall Street are confident a turn lower is coming in a sector that accounts for a big portion of the consumer price index. Moreover, recent inflation has been driven by services items, such as auto insurance and video streaming, that will likely prove to be one-off adjustments, with insurers, for example, raising premiums to account for earlier vehicle price hikes that have leveled off.

Yet Biden's disapproval rating has risen to 56%, according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll in early November, and has been above 50% since prices began to steadily rise as the economy emerged from the pandemic. Earlier surveys found about 60% of respondents disapproved of the Democratic president's handling of inflation and 56% of his handling of the economy overall, though the results showed a heavy partisan slant. Even with a still-low unemployment rate, 46% of respondents disapproved of Biden's stewardship of the job market while just 41% approved.

The results have not been much better for the Fed. A September Gallup poll found a record 25% of respondents gave the central bank a "poor" performance rating. Only 36% said it was doing a good or excellent job, the worst such reading in a decade.