The strong US economy is adding 'upside risks' to inflation

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The 2023 economic story has centered around declining inflation coinciding with stronger-than-expected economic growth leading to the US skirting a recession. And this despite the economy navigating the highest interest rate environment in more than two decades.

But as we approach 2024, the stronger-than-expected consumer could prevent more good news on the inflation front and may influence how Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell frames the Fed's fight against inflation during his speech on Friday in Jackson Hole, Wyo.

Read more: What the Fed rate hike means for bank accounts, CDs, loans, and credit cards

"We think Powell's tone at Jackson Hole will be less balanced than the July FOMC minutes since the latest data raise the risk of a fresh increase in inflation," Bank of America US and global economist Shruti Mishra wrote in a note on Sunday.

UNITED STATES - JUNE 22: Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell prepares to testify during the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee hearing titled
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell in Dirksen Building on Thursday, June 22, 2023. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images) · Tom Williams via Getty Images

Powell's speech will come after another strong run of economic data showed consumer spending remained resilient in July. Economic growth in the third quarter is now tracking towards its fastest pace since the fourth quarter of 2021.

"We see building upside risks for goods prices more broadly as demand for goods is picking up again just as commodity prices have been rising, inventories appear to have reached a peak, and the disinflationary forces from supply chains correcting could be reaching an end," Citi economist Veronica Clark wrote in a note on Monday.

The 0.7% uptick in retail sales in July — which included a 10.3% jump in nonstore retailer sales compared to last year — showed consumers are still spending on goods. Strength in goods consumption, economists at Citi argue, could introduce a greater possibility inflation reaccelerates.

There is also a more complicated narrative brewing below inflation's headline decline over the past several months.

Headline inflation, as measured by the Consumer Price Index (CPI), increased 0.2% month over month in July. The same can be said for "core PCE," which excludes the volatile food and energy categories.

Economists largely viewed this is a positive for the Fed as core CPI increased at the slowest pace since October 2021.

But Jefferies US economist Thomas Simons argues that might not be showing the full picture.

Healthcare services and air fares have also proved extremely volatile in the post-pandemic economy, per Simons. When removing those metrics, Simons's alternative gauge, "super duper core service inflation," increased at a 0.7% rate in June, the biggest month-over-month increase since February.