It seems that shoppers in the US are determined not to slow down their pace of spending. This is despite smaller wage gains and higher interest rates.
Core retail sales as defined by NRF – based on Census Bureau data but excluding automobile dealers, gasoline stations and restaurants – were up 3.8% unadjusted year-over-year for the first four months of the year. That is in line with NRF’s forecast for 2024 retail sales to grow between 2.5% and 3.5% over 2023.
“The good news is that the economy is growing, inflation is moderating, and overall fundamentals look fine as increased consumer spending supports underlying momentum,” said National Retail Federation (NRF) Chief Economist Jack Kleinhenz on June 4, in a statement.
“U.S. economic growth for the remainder of this year will depend on several factors but particularly the pace of job growth, inflation and what actions will be taken by the Federal Reserve," Kleinhenz added.
NRF’s Monthly Economic Review reports that gross domestic product is still expected to grow about 2.3% over 2023 but that employment is now expected to grow by an average 180,000 jobs a month, about 50,000 higher than expected this spring.
“The biggest change in the economic outlook since our initial projections is that immigration has been much stronger,” Kleinhenz said, noting that the Congressional Budget Office now estimates that net immigration last year was 3.3 million, more than triple the previous estimate of 1 million. “New immigrants have increased the supply of workers, raising production capacity, closing some shortages in the labor market and allowing the economy to generate jobs without overheating and accelerating inflation.”
The availability of more workers, particularly in low-wage jobs, can help limit wage-driven inflation, and increased immigration “explains some of the surprising strength in consumer spending since 2022,” Kleinhenz said.
Effect of Inflation
Inflation was higher than expected in the first few months of the year, but much of it was driven by prices for services and the trend is expected to be short-lived, Kleinhenz said.
Overall year-over-year inflation stood at 2.7% in March, according to the PCE index. But the figure was driven by service-sector prices, which were up 4% while prices for goods were unchanged from a year earlier and have been gradually declining.
Kleinhenz had expected the Fed to begin to lower interest rates in July. But with inflation still not down as much as the Fed would like, a cut isn’t likely to happen until later in the year.
“The Fed has reinforced its belief in being data-dependent and that means inflation needs to go down for several consecutive months before the central bank is going to cut rates,” Kleinhenz said. “The Fed has managed to restrain the economy and bring down inflation, and a delay in easing should further cool the economy and keep our initial GDP growth projection intact. The broader trend of lower inflation has not shifted, and the mix of inflation rates should become more favorable, with slower price growth in the service sector and less deflation of prices for goods.”