The Daily - The State of the U.S. Economy in 4 Numbers

Episode Date: February 1, 2023

The typical sales price of an existing family home in the United States in December: 372,700. The number of layoffs in the tech sector since the beginning of the year: 76,000. The number by which cons...umer spending fell in December: 0.2 percent. The increase in the cost of the same kind of carton of eggs bought by an editor on “The Daily” a year apart: 251 percent.What do these numbers tell us about the state of the country’s economy?Guest: Ben Casselman, an economics and business reporter for The New York Times.Background reading: The U.S. economy showed momentum at the end of 2022, defying recession fears and displaying the resilience of consumers and businesses in the face of inflation and rising interest rates.For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday. 

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro. This is The Daily. Today. The state of the U.S. economy so far in 2023, as explained through four different numbers. My colleague, Ben Castleman, on what those numbers can tell us. It's Wednesday, February 1st. Ben, welcome back to the show.
Starting point is 00:00:46 Thanks for having me. We come to you, as we always do today, with a curiosity about the U.S. economy. And the meta story of our economy right now, as you and our colleagues have told us over and over and over, is that inflation is high. that inflation is high, the government wants to lower it, and has taken aggressive action to accomplish that, which has all kinds of ripple effects across the economy and could eventually tip us into a recession. And since the new year began, a lot of economic numbers have been flying around, some of which feel contradictory or at the very least confusing when it comes to the question of inflation and recession.
Starting point is 00:01:26 And so we wanted to talk those numbers through with you. That's our mission today. I will deliver perfect clarity and total foresight. As I always do. As only you can. We're going to see about that. I should say, I have come prepared. I have assembled these numbers.
Starting point is 00:01:46 You're bringing me numbers. I'm bringing you numbers. I like it. This is going to have a kind of quiz show quality. I am the host. And the first number that I want to throw at you is about the housing market. All right. Which is, of course, a pillar of our economy.
Starting point is 00:01:59 And that number, Ben, is $372,700. number, Ben, is $372,700, which, of course you know this, is the typical sales price of an existing single-family home in the U.S. in December. And in reading about that number, I found that it's up a lot compared with the past few years. So the reason I bring you this number is that it seems to reflect a pretty healthy housing market. Is that the case? Yes and no. Isn't that always the way I begin these answers? Infuriating. So let's take a little bit of a step back on what's been going on in the housing market. Sure. In the pandemic, Americans rushed out and bought homes.
Starting point is 00:02:46 Early on, they were looking for more space as we were all working from home. Interest rates, as you may recall, were super low. And home prices soared. I mean, just through the roof. But, you know, that 372,000 number you cited to folks who are in New York or in San Francisco or L.A., right, may not sound that high. But before the pandemic, home prices had never been above $300,000 on a median level, right? So they went way, way up. And of course, then something changed dramatically. The Fed started raising interest rates. Right, which of course means it's more expensive to borrow money
Starting point is 00:03:21 and more expensive to buy a home. Yeah, classically, the housing market is the place where Fed policy has an impact. It's the place where you borrow the most money as a consumer. Builders borrow money to build. Everything about the housing market is driven by interest rates. And so interest rates went up and the housing market ground to a halt. Wait, wait, wait. But look at that nice number, 372,700. That does not sound like a housing market grounding to a halt.
Starting point is 00:03:53 This is the crazy thing about the housing market right now. Everything has ground to a halt except prices. Builders stopped building homes. Buyers stopped buying homes. Think about it. If you, in January of 2021, when interest rates were 3%, thought you could afford a $300,000 home. When interest rates suddenly go up to 6%, even 7%, you can't afford a $300,000 home anymore. Right?
Starting point is 00:04:23 The monthly payments are going to be too high for you. Now, what normally you would expect to happen, right, is that prices would fall. But here's the thing. The sellers of those homes are all sitting there with their 3% mortgages also, and they're like, you know what? Never mind giving up our nice, cheap mortgage
Starting point is 00:04:42 and moving to somewhere else where we're going to have to borrow money at 6% so they don't sell. So if you own an existing home with a low mortgage, your incentive to move and thereby create a potentially more affordable home for somebody else is virtually nil. So you don't. So prices don't go down. Exactly. So instead what happens? Transactions go down. Nobody buys, nobody sells, nobody builds. The total number of single-family home sales is down by more than a third over the past year.
Starting point is 00:05:19 Wow. So prices haven't moved much, but every other kind of activity has really fallen off a cliff. Hmm. Okay, so is that a precursor to prices falling? This kind of stubborn cycle that you're describing, people want prices to go down, sellers aren't willing to make them go down. Like, how long can that really last? Yeah, so is it a precursor?
Starting point is 00:05:45 them go down? Like, how long can that really last? Yeah. So, is it a precursor? Yes, almost certainly. Most forecasters expect home prices to start to fall, and they have started to fall. But it's going to take time, and it's probably not, according, again, to most forecasters, going to be a huge decline, which is good news, right? If you're a homeowner, you and that might not be the worst thing, but depending on where you are in the economy, it can be very, very frustrating. And if you're trying to buy a house right now, it's exceedingly frustrating. Yeah, it's very frustrating for would-be homebuyers. And we've got an entire millennial generation that has been waiting for a moment to break into the housing market, to finally buy, to finally start
Starting point is 00:06:45 generating wealth in the housing market. And, you know, I think many of them were sitting here saying, hey, maybe if prices come down, I can finally buy in. And right, it's not happening. But it's also very troubling for the Federal Reserve, for policymakers who are thinking about the larger economy, because the concern there is if the economy doesn't slow in the way that they expect, do they have to get even more aggressive? Do they have to do even more to slow it down? And if that happens, do they run the risk of causing a recession, which is going to be much more painful for a much larger number of people? Indeed, which I think brings us quite naturally to the job market. Our colleague Gina Smilick told us back in December about a pretty big wave of layoffs
Starting point is 00:07:33 that started at the end of the year in the tech sector, but it has only intensified since January 1st. There have actually been 76,000 layoffs in that sector alone since the start of the year, which is about 2,500 tech workers a day. And those layoffs have actually expanded now beyond tech into media, retail, and financial companies as well. I think it's safe to say that that feels very ominous. Is that how it looks to you? Yeah, no question, right? If you're reading the headlines right now and you're seeing these news of some of our biggest, strongest companies laying off, in some cases, tens of thousands of workers, that's going to make a lot of people nervous. And as you said, this is not only in tech,
Starting point is 00:08:22 but some perspective is really important here. We still are seeing, in the aggregate, layoffs at among their lowest levels on record. Now, we'll get some new data this week and we'll see exactly what it shows. But so far, at least, it's really been isolated to a few sectors, a few mostly better paying white collar sectors, frankly. And elsewhere in the labor market, things still look really strong. Can you give us some data points on that? Yeah. I mean, so the unemployment rate is at three and a half percent. That's a 50 year low.
Starting point is 00:09:02 That's a 50-year low. There are 10.5 million job openings in our most recent data. That's down a little bit from the peak earlier last year, but it's still enormously high. We're still seeing a couple hundred thousand jobs added on net every month. jobs added on net every month. So all of our sort of big picture signals are that the job market still remains really, really strong, that not many people are losing jobs. If they are losing jobs, in most cases, they're able to go and get a new one relatively quickly. I certainly don't want to understate the harm that it's doing to people who lose their jobs or the fears that they're facing. But we are not yet seeing any clear signs of mass layoffs or a huge sort of reversal of fortunes in the job market. And why aren't we seeing those signs?
Starting point is 00:10:00 Why is that? Why are things so healthy in the job market? It's a great question. Why is that? Why are things so healthy in the job market? It's a great question. And honestly, it's been a surprise to a lot of people that the job market has stayed as strong as it has. You know, companies have been trying like crazy to hire for the last couple of years and had a really hard time doing it, right? We've all heard about, you know, the labor shortage and the great resignation and all of this. And so companies that have sort of finally managed to bring people back are not going to be eager just to turn around and fire them all, especially if they think that this might just be a short downturn. So there's a lot that's
Starting point is 00:10:36 encouraging companies to keep hiring or at least to hold on to the workers that they've already got. Right. Now, normally, a healthy job market is an unquestionable good for the economy. But as you and many others have told us, a healthy job market gets complicated when you're trying to control inflation. Yeah, that's right. I mean, look, I think there's no question that low unemployment is a good thing. And the whole goal here, right, is to find a way to bring down inflation without causing a whole bunch of people to lose their jobs, right? That's the goal right
Starting point is 00:11:11 now. But there is a sense that in order to do that, you need the job market to cool off in other ways. Because when workers are able to just jump between jobs and play employers off each other, are able to just jump between jobs and play employers off each other. They can demand more pay. More pay tends to lead to higher prices. And so we are expecting to see and really in some ways hoping to see a bit of a cool down in the job market over time. Got it. So as with the housing market, we're looking at a situation
Starting point is 00:11:38 where the government just might need to do more to cool things down, to slow the economy. That's right. But the concern here is that if you hit the brake too hard, that the economy could slow more than you want. So let's look at that tech layoff situation that you talked about. Before, we saw a couple of companies laying off workers, and then all of a sudden, the whole sector. It seemed like every company was laying off 6% of its workforce, 7% of its workforce. Right. It was almost like the layoffs from one company encouraged them at another. Yeah, that's right. And look, I think that there are some reasons why tech is a little bit
Starting point is 00:12:15 of a universe unto itself, but it is a reminder that kind of once the dam breaks, this can happen really fast. And so we can't assume that just because the layoffs haven't started yet in a big way that they couldn't happen pretty quick once we sort of reach some tipping point. Right. And that suddenly looks like a layoff contagion. And that starts to look a lot like a recession. We'll be right back.
Starting point is 00:12:57 Ben, we just talked about how the job market is in a healthy place, perhaps healthier than the government might want because it helps keep prices high. So that's where I want to turn now, consumer spending. The Times reported, and Ben, you were a byline on the story, that consumer spending fell by 0.2% in December. And that would seem like a good thing when it comes to inflation, but it's such a small decline, two-tenths of a percentage, that I don't know what to make of it. So what did you make of it? I think what I make of it is that we're starting to see the first early signs that consumers might be pulling back. If we sort of zoom out a little bit here, pulling back. If we sort of zoom out a little bit here, consumer spending has been on a tear practically since the pandemic began. First, people rushed out and bought stuff. They bought Pelotons. They bought cars. They bought like everything that they could find because they
Starting point is 00:13:59 couldn't go on vacation. And then the economy reopened and people went on vacation and they went out to restaurant meals, right? And they spent on services and they actually kept spending on stuff as well because it turned out a lot of people had saved a lot of money in COVID. And so that has been a big driver of inflation. And that was the story for most of last year. In the last couple months of the year, we started to see some signs that that was shifting. We started to see that those savings that people had built up were starting to dwindle. We started to see that people were turning to credit cards because they were running out of cash. And we started to see that actual spending was falling.
Starting point is 00:14:48 It fell a little bit in November. It fell a little bit in December. Now, I don't want to overstate this. These were small declines. They were just a couple of months. Who knows what's going to happen in January and February and for the rest of this year. But these were some of the early signs that consumers, after dealing with high prices, after hearing about recession, about hearing all those tech layoffs we were talking about before, that they might be starting to say, you know what? I better pull back my spending a little bit.
Starting point is 00:15:18 It occurs to me that a consumer spending drop of 0.2 percentage points might be a kind of ideal version of consumer spending slowing. And I'm curious if you see it that way, because it's not so precipitous that it leads to entire industries undertaking big layoffs. It sounds a little bit like the housing market. You don't want the bottom to fall out all at once. You want things to slow in a pretty gradual and gentle way. That's right, but I'll push back on one thing,
Starting point is 00:15:49 which is that any outright decline in spending, if it continues for any length of time, is almost certainly going to signal a recession. Consumer spending is 70% of the U.S. economy. If it starts to fall, even a small amount, but consistently over time, then retailers are going to have to start laying off workers, right? Restaurants are going to have to start laying off workers. They're literally selling less each month than the month before. And that's when we get into a recession. I think
Starting point is 00:16:20 what we'd ideally like to see is slow growth. You know, that would sort of support that gradual cooling in the economy. Right. And help us avoid the dreaded R-word, recession. The dreaded R-word. Okay. Ben, I want to end with a number that gets kicked around a lot. And it's pretty much a national obsession. a lot. And it's pretty much a national obsession. And it happens to be a measure of inflation,
Starting point is 00:16:55 which is the other big scary word in this conversation. And that's the price of eggs. And your friend, our editor, Lisa Chow, for some reason keeps her receipts forever. And discovered that she had just paid $6.99 for a carton of 18 eggs at a local suburban grocery store. A year ago, she found in rustling through those old receipts, back in January of 2022, she paid $1.99 for that same carton of 18 eggs. And that is a 251% price increase for the exact same thing. So how can that be? And what does that tell us about inflation?
Starting point is 00:17:37 So first of all, Lisa needs to shop around for eggs a little bit more because they're up a lot, but they're not up quite that much. But no, look, I mean, eggs are up something like 60% over the past year, right? So, I mean, the price of eggs has absolutely gone crazy. This is a huge deal, right, for a lot of people. You know, on eggs specifically, there was an avian flu outbreak, which killed off a lot of chickens and led to, you know, of course, then a shortage of eggs. There have been accusations also of collusion, which, you know, I have not had a chance to dig into deeply, but, you know, may also be contributing to higher prices. Right. Egg fixing. Egg fixing. But I think
Starting point is 00:18:14 there's a larger point here, right, which is that inflation has been cooling. Consumer prices overall actually fell slightly in December. And over the past year, prices are up 6.5%, which is a lot, but is not nearly as high as the 8% and even 9% inflation that we were seeing in the middle of last year. while I don't think we're anywhere close to the Fed declaring victory on this, that has been encouraging to see those price increases coming down from where they were in the middle of last year. So I just want to pull back about as far as we possibly can in an episode about four different numbers. Because in each of them, it does seem like the overall direction of things is pretty good when we think about the kind of twin threats of inflation and recession. Does that feel correct? I think that's right.
Starting point is 00:19:18 You started out this conversation talking about how we wanted to bring inflation down without causing a recession and right inflation has come down and we have not yet had a recession right unemployment is still low and so nothing that has happened so far is inconsistent with that happy outcome. It doesn't guarantee that we'll get there by any means, and the job is not done. But we have not yet veered off that course, and that's good news. Ben, I think it's possible we're going to end an episode about the economy in a kind of happy place,
Starting point is 00:20:05 which is rare. It is rare, and I make no promises that the ending to our next episode together will be equally happy. But I think that's right. I think that right now, the things that have been happening are, broadly speaking, the things that we want to see. And there are a lot of threats on the horizon, lots of things that could go wrong, but they haven't gone wrong yet. And maybe we should take that moment for the moment of optimism that it is.
Starting point is 00:20:39 All right. Well, Ben, thank you very much. Thanks for having me. Thank you very much. Thanks for having me. On Wednesday, the Federal Reserve is expected to raise interest rates yet again. In its latest effort to hold down inflation, it would mark the eighth increase over the past year. We'll be right back. Here's what else you need to know today. On Tuesday, Republican Congressman George Santos of New York, who has admitted to fabricating much of his biography and resume,
Starting point is 00:21:26 told fellow House Republicans that he would temporarily step down from two congressional committees. It was the first major concession from Santos since his lies were revealed, and came just hours after he met with House Speaker Kevin McCarthy. Did McCarthy tell you to step away from the committees? I'm sorry, nobody tells me to do anything. I made a decision on my own and I thought that's what we're doing. In an exchange with reporters outside the Capitol, Santos denied that the decision was made under pressure from Republican leaders.
Starting point is 00:22:02 Meanwhile, a poll of Santos' constituents has found that the vast majority of them want him to resign. In the poll conducted by Newsday and Siena College and released on Tuesday, 78% of voters in Santos' district said he should leave Congress. Today's episode was produced by Asta Chaturvedi and Mary Wilson.
Starting point is 00:22:31 It was edited by Lisa Chow and John Ketchum, contains original music by Dan Powell, Marion Lozano, and Alisha Ba'itu, and was engineered by Chris Wood. Our theme music is by Jim Brunberg and Ben Lansford of Wonderland. That's it for The Daily. I'm Michael Barbaro. See you tomorrow.

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