The Fed Policy Outlook

The Bureau of Economic Analysis will report the advance estimate of 1Q18 GDP growth on April 27. These figures will be revised, but the underlying story is not expected to change much. Growth was likely moderate, not horrible, but far short of the lofty expectations that some had put forth at the start of the quarter. Nobody appears too worried about that. Fed officials saw signs of first quarter softness as “transitory.” Stock market volatility and tariffs are also viewed as no big deal. Policy decisions will remain data dependent and monetary policy is not on a preset path, but 25 basis points per quarter is the most likely scenario and it’s up to the upcoming information to dissuade the Fed from acting.

Inflation-adjusted consumer spending rose at a 4.0 annual rate in 4Q17 – strong, but partly reflecting a rebound from the third quarter’s hurricanes. Still, it’s not unusual to see a more modest gain (seen at about a 1% annual rate) following such strength. Shipments of capital goods have continued to improve, but the pace slowed considerably from 4Q17 (where growth also reflected a rebound from hurricane effects). Weather was likely a factor in some areas in 1Q18. In addition, GDP figures have exhibited residual seasonality. Specifically, first quarter growth has generally been lower than the rest of the year. This could reflect permanent changes to seasonal patterns following the financial crisis, but that would disappear over time (as the seasonal adjustment pattern adapts). Note that the 1Q18 weakness is not observed in the key components of GDP (consumer spending, business fixed investment).

Scott Brown
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GDP growth figures are often uneven across quarters. Fed officials know this and continue to expect a pickup in growth in the near term, reflecting the impact of fiscal stimulus (the Tax Cut and Jobs Act and the recent government spending agreement) and a strong global economy.

Still, the impact of fiscal stimulus isn’t clear. Cash on balance sheets and lower borrowing costs hadn’t lit much of a fire under capital investment, so why would a reduction in corporate tax rates? At the same time, business sentiment has been strong, and that may help. However, the consumer is the driving force of the economy. There was some reduction in individual taxes, but not for everybody, and generally not enough for the typical worker to notice. While there have been announcements of one-time bonuses and salary increases, some critics have denounced that as mere PR (as some bonus intentions had been announced ahead of the TCJA passage). Moreover, wage increases have generally remained moderate in recent months.