The report provides a reprieve for Federal Reserve officials as they prepare for their upcoming policy meeting on June 16-17. While respondents anticipate inflation remaining at 3.1% over a three-year horizon and 3.0% over five years, the data highlights a growing undercurrent of anxiety regarding personal finances. Households expressed the highest level of dissatisfaction with their current financial standing since January 2023, while confidence in securing new employment should they lose their current roles has notably waned.
This climate of uncertainty persists even as broader economic indicators show resilience. A robust May employment report has emboldened some policymakers to consider further rate hikes, aiming to curb an inflation gauge that reached 3.8% in April. Cleveland Fed President Beth Hammack noted that while she does not currently see signs of an entrenched inflationary mindset, the bank is monitoring expectations closely to ensure they do not drift from the 2% objective. Meanwhile, the survey recorded a significant jump in home price growth expectations to 3.5%, the highest level since July 2022, underscoring the complex pressures weighing on the average household budget.




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