speeches · January 12, 2022
Regional President Speech
Tom Barkin · President
Home / News / Speeches / Thomas I Barkin / 2022
Virginia Bankers Association and Virginia Chamber of Commerce
2022 Financial Forecast
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I take �ve key lessons from 2021. First, COVID-19 still impacts our growth, but it has
largely become a supply side and in�ationary challenge. Second, government
support helped bridge our economy through the initial shock, but we may also be
seeing other e�ects. Third, our supply chains were too lean to support the wide
swings in demand. Fourth, power has shifted to labor as demand has exceeded
supply. Finally, the word transitory did not serve its intended purpose, as in�ation
has lasted longer than many expected.
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These lessons help shape my outlook for 2022. While there are many unknowns
ahead, I expect increases in household balance sheets to sustain demand for quite
some time. It may take a year or longer to get to the other side of supply chain
pressures, but they will eventually catch up. Labor will remain short. Prices will cause
consumers to adjust as savings erode, and wages will bring people o� the sidelines.
•
But what will happen to the path for in�ation? I am closely watching the prices for
goods versus services. Will they continue on their historic paths or will present
adjustments persist? How these two sectors net out will matter as the Fed continues
to work to meet its stable price mandate.
•
In terms of policy, we have started the process of normalization, but the timing and
pace of any future rate moves will depend on the answer to my question on
in�ation.
Thanks for having me here. The last time I was with you in person was two years ago. At the
time, the question was how long our historically long 10-year upturn could last. I remember
saying that expansions don’t die of old age — they die of a heart attack. I guess my point
was right, but for sure I had the wrong disease.
It’s hard to believe we’ve now been dealing with this pandemic for two years. From an
economist’s point of view, we had the deepest but also the shortest recession in memory.
So now, technically, we are in the midst of a 20-month recovery. And not just any recovery.
This one is historic.
Today, I thought I might look back and then look forward. We’ve learned a lot that will help
inform where the economy goes from here. These thoughts represent, of course, my views
only and not necessarily those of anyone else in the Federal Reserve System. So, what did
we learn in 2021? I took �ve lessons.
In 2020, the pandemic drove uncertainty and lockdowns, which in turn meant job loss and
spending that was depressed and de�ationary at �rst and then rotated to goods over
services. In 2021, vaccines largely freed demand from COVID-19’s control (except for a few
sectors like business travel). Despite the delta variant, consumer spending more than fully
recovered, and we saw the highest number of job openings on record.
But the COVID-19 economic threat — much like the virus — has evolved. You can see that
with the omicron variant. Cases have spiked. But, as the virus starts to become perceived as
more endemic than pandemic, U.S. communities are no longer closing down. Demand,
especially for goods, remains healthy. But uncertainty around health, child care and in-
person schooling suppresses labor force participation. Outbreaks internationally disrupt
global supply chains. So COVID-19 has now largely become a supply side and in�ationary
challenge. We saw that with air travel over the holidays. People want to �y. We just can’t
�nd enough �ight crews.
Historic levels of government support helped bridge workers, small businesses, and heavily
impacted industries to the other side of the initial economic shock. It fueled this strong
recovery. GDP is now 1.4 percent over the fourth quarter of 2019 and will likely soon even
surpass the pre-COVID-19 trend line.
But these actions had consequences. Stimulus created strong demand, especially for
goods, which are up 16 percent. That demand broke supply chains. Workers were slow to
return to the labor force, perhaps supported by these transfer payments. And of course,
we’ve seen a considerable increase in the national debt.
Prior to the pandemic, productivity meant lean operations, global supply chains, just-in-
time inventories and �exible labor models.
COVID-19 exposed those strategies. As demand ebbed then spiked, manufacturers lost
control. Input shortages, transportation challenges and labor constraints proliferated. We
all understood when auto manufacturers shut down in the context of lockdowns, but who
expected they would have to shut down again last year due to a lack of chips?
We’ve been living for decades in a world of excess workers, driven by the baby boom,
improved health, women in the workforce, immigration and o�shoring. These kept wages
and bene�ts, and e�ectively cost-driven in�ation, down.
But in 2021, the tables turned. Labor is now painfully short. Workforce participation has
stayed remarkably stagnant since the spring at around 1.5 percentage points below the
pre-pandemic level. 3.6 million fewer people are working. We see fewer retirees returning
to work, more parents leaving the workforce and countless workers reassessing their lives.
Quits are at record highs. As a result, employers are raising wages, improving working
conditions, broadening their search e�orts and becoming more �exible. 2021 saw the
highest wage growth since before the Great Recession, peaking at 4.7 percent in
September, according to the Atlanta Fed’s Wage Growth Tracker.
For much of 2021, we used the word “transitory” to describe in�ation. It tried to capture the
idea that rising prices were connected to COVID-19 forces that should eventually dissipate,
such as supply bottlenecks.
But as the chair said in his recent testimony, the word didn’t serve its purpose. Webster’s
has two de�nitions for transitory: “of brief duration” and “not persistent.” Most of us
interpreted it as the former, even if we meant the latter. And elevated in�ation has clearly
lasted longer than most of us expected. On a 12-month basis, core PCE in�ation is at the
highest level in over 30 years.
I feel obliged to start with a caveat: Forecasting isn’t easy. I’m told economic forecasters
were created to make weather forecasters look good. For example, in the summer of 2021,
I thought participation would rebound strongly in the fall as schools reopened and
enhanced unemployment bene�ts ceased. I didn’t foresee the longer-term workforce
challenges we face. As a result, I underestimated in�ation.
And 2022 is no clearer. The path and impact of current and future COVID-19 variants is
unknown. Congress is still debating legislation that may or may not enhance workforce
participation. Consumer sentiment is weak at a time when consumer spending is strong.
The yield curve has been sending signals that are hard to interpret. The noise on in�ation is
elevated, yet market indicators of in�ation compensation appear largely una�ected.
Household balance sheets are �ush. Household net worth was $32 trillion higher in the
third quarter of 2021 than in the same period in 2019 (up 28 percent). This was driven, of
course, by investment and real estate appreciation. Pandemic lifestyle changes combined
with government transfers created excess savings and made households more liquid as
well. In September, low-income families had 70 percent more cash on hand than pre-
pandemic (albeit only $1,000), and high-income families had about 40 percent more,
according to JPMorgan Chase. Recent data shows those savings are starting to be spent
down.
In addition, businesses are reporting record pro�ts and strong balance sheets. Inventories
are low and will need to be replenished. States are seeing sizable surpluses. All these will
sustain demand for quite some time.
I’m hoping to see some progress in the �rst quarter. Seasonal demand reductions should
give manufacturers breathing room, and some sectors will be digesting the impact of
stockpiling last fall. But Omicron is of course a wild card here.
And it will take a year or longer to get fully to the other side. Constrained labor will continue
to hinder supply. Capacity building takes business con�dence and time. The median
respondent in The CFO Survey forecasts that supply constraints should last another 10-12
months.
The trends have been clear for a while: Fertility is down, immigration has slowed and our
workforce is aging. In the last upturn, participation didn’t drop as much as predicted. But
the pandemic has introduced even more forces, such as unstable child and elder care and
an expansion of the social safety net.
What we may �nd is that the aberration isn’t what we see today but what we saw in the last
upturn. Labor will likely struggle to meet coming demand. Companies are trading one
another’s workers, and this auction will continue until employers reduce their need for
workers through automation or other productivity investments. Those will take time.
For the most part, we are not seeing price levels a�ect quantity demanded the way you
might imagine. Retailers have prioritized availability over price. Employers are paying higher
wages without reducing jobs. Consumers, fueled by strong savings and higher wages,
haven’t yet chosen to begin trading down. Labor force participation isn’t moving.
But price levels will eventually have an impact. Walmart merchandisers won’t abandon
everyday low prices. Consumer savings will erode, driving them to price shop. Employers
will pursue lower labor strategies. Higher wages will eventually bring people o� the
sidelines.
Once current in�ation pressures ease, will we return to the 1.9 percent core PCE in�ation of
the last 30 years? The 3.0 percent of the past two years? Or the 5.3 percent annualized
in�ation of the last nine months? Are memories short or long?
Given my view on 2022, the data I’m tracking most closely are the prices for goods versus
services. For perspective, taking 24-month di�erences to avoid pandemic base e�ects,
annualized CPI services in�ation has been 2.8 percent, roughly in line with the prior �ve
years. In contrast, annualized goods in�ation has been 6.3 percent, signi�cantly higher than
the prior �ve-year drop of -0.2 percent per year.
As supply chain pressures wane, I expect goods in�ation to reduce. But will the factors that
have kept goods prices in line historically (like e-commerce, retailer purchasing power, and
globalization) continue to have the same e�ect or not? Will supply chain redesign push
costs and prices up instead?
And as labor shortages continue, I expect them to pressure the price of services, where
wages are a more meaningful share of costs. But how much can and will be passed on to
customers?
How these two sectors net out will matter as the Fed continues to work to meet its stable
price mandate.
Which brings us to policy. With the labor market tight and in�ation elevated, we have
started the process of normalization. We started tapering asset purchases in November
and then accelerated that process at our last meeting in December. At current pace, we will
be done in mid-March. At that time, we will be free to begin normalizing rates, should
circumstances support that. The timing and pace of any rate moves will depend on the
answer to my in�ation question. The closer that in�ation comes back to target levels, the
easier it will be to normalize rates at a measured pace. But were in�ation to remain
elevated and broad-based, we would need to take on normalization more aggressively, as
we have successfully done in the past.
With that said, I warned you forecasting is hard. So, I am interested in what you are seeing
in the market and am open to your input and questions.
This is the change in seasonally adjusted total nonfarm employment from February 2020 to
December 2021. Bureau of Labor Statistics via Haver Analytics.
Economic Growth In�ation Employment and Labor Markets Monetary Policy
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Cite this document
APA
Tom Barkin (2022, January 12). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20220113_tom_barkin
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20220113_tom_barkin,
author = {Tom Barkin},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2022},
month = {Jan},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20220113_tom_barkin},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}