U.S. Inflation Outlook Falls for First Time Since October 2020

U.S. consumers don’t expect red-hot inflation levels to last in the long term.

That’s the takeaway from data analysis by six co-authors including New York Fed President John Williams, who was listed as a co-writer in the regional Fed’s Liberty Street Economics blog series for the first time.

The authors drew in part from the January consumer survey from Federal Reserve Bank of New York, which showed that the median one-year-ahead inflation expectations fell for the first time since October 2020, to 5.8%. The outlook over three years dropped even more sharply, and the decline was broad-based across age, education and income.

Combined with data from the University of Michigan’s sentiment index, this indicates that consumers seem to recognize the unusual nature of the current bout of high inflation, the economists said in the blog post Monday.