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American households continue to expect rising inflation: NY Fed survey

A new survey from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York noted that American households are continuing to ratchet up expectations for the pace of price increases over the next year.

The New York Fed noted that in August, the median expectation for the rate of inflation over the next year increased to 5.2% — the highest seen since the Survey of Consumer Expectations was launched in 2013.

Over a three-year horizon, inflation expectations rose to 4.0%, also a series high for the survey.

The New York Fed's Survey of Consumer Expectations asks approximately 1,300 household heads about their overall expectations for inflation and prices in categories like food, gas, housing, and education. Source: Federal Reserve Bank of New York
The New York Fed's Survey of Consumer Expectations asks approximately 1,300 household heads about their overall expectations for inflation and prices in categories like food, gas, housing, and education. Source: Federal Reserve Bank of New York

Rising survey-based measures of inflation expectations are testing the resolve of policymakers who maintain that the faster pace of price increases is likely to be a temporary phenomenon.

Officials at the Federal Reserve, the central bank tasked with ensuring price stability, have pointed to virus-induced supply chain disruptions as inflationary pressures that can’t last forever.

“Inflation at these levels is, of course, a cause for concern,” Fed Chairman Jerome Powell said on Aug. 27. “But that concern is tempered by a number of factors that suggest that these elevated readings are likely to prove temporary.”

The Fed’s target for inflation (not inflation expectations) is 2%. But rising inflation expectations have been seen as a factor that could lift current inflation. Fed officials concerned about the downside risk of runaway inflation are closely watching surveys and market readings to make sure expectations do not become “unanchored” from the Fed’s target.

“We are seeing them still anchored,” Philadelphia Fed President Patrick Harker told Yahoo Finance on Aug. 27. “But it is clearly a risk that inflation may be running higher than we would like.”

Market-based measures of inflation expectations, by comparison, have suggested more muted expectations for the pace of price increases. Bets placed on the market for Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities have steadily suggested inflation expectations over a five-year horizon of about 2.5%.

A key market-based measure of inflation, the 5-year breakeven rate, measured the spread between the 5-year U.S. Treasury and the 5-Year Treasury Inflation-Indexed Constant Maturity Securities (or TIPS). Credit: Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
A key market-based measure of inflation, the 5-year breakeven rate, measured the spread between the 5-year U.S. Treasury and the 5-Year Treasury Inflation-Indexed Constant Maturity Securities (or TIPS). Credit: Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

For the Fed’s part, officials are debating the timing of when to start paring back on its extraordinarily accommodative monetary policy as inflationary pressures remain high. Powell and other Fed officials have telegraphed that the first step, which would involve slowing its aggressive asset purchase program, is likely to begin later this year.

The central bank’s next policy-setting announcement will take place on Sept. 22.

Brian Cheung is a reporter covering the Fed, economics, and banking for Yahoo Finance. You can follow him on Twitter @bcheungz.

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