Goldman’s Jan Hatzius: We’re still ‘far from a normal economic environment’

In This Article:

Jan Hatzius, Goldman Sachs Chief Economist and Head of Global Economics and Markets Research, joins Yahoo Finance Live to weigh in on the outlook for U.S. economic recovery, inflation fears and what’s next for the Fed.

Video Transcript

JULIE HYMAN: First, we do want to talk about inflation here, how much you should be worried about it. Obviously, a lot of market participants are indeed quite worried about it. Jan Hatzius is joining us now. He is Goldman Sachs Chief Economist and Head of Global Economics and Markets Research. Jan, it's really good to see you.

As you look at inflation, as I've been reading your recent notes, you do seem to be in the transitory camp, that this is not going to last at the current pace. That said, how persistent or transitory can it be and still start to have an effect on demand? I mean, even if it's not going to last at this current rate, at some point are consumers going to start to push back against rising prices?

JAN HATZIUS: It's very nice to see you too, Julie. It's very good to be on. I think that demand is normalizing in the economy. And it's normalizing in the labor markets. And that is putting some upward pressure on prices.

So I think it's really that stronger demand is normalizing prices in areas like travel and entertainment and other services, but also in the goods sector to some degree. And that is giving us these large but mostly one-off price increases. Now, they are pretty sizable. And we think the core CPI is probably going to be in the sort of 3 and 1/2% range for the remainder of the year and will come down next year, I think, but only gradually.

That said, the PCE index, which is a broader index that's monitored by the Federal Reserve, I think is going to be quite a bit lower, getting to about 2 and 3/4 in the short-term. And then we have that coming back to 2% next year. And I think in that environment, the sort of feedback effects back into consumer demand should be relatively limited.

BRIAN SOZZI: Jan, what are some of the upside risks to inflation?

JAN HATZIUS: I think the upside risks are basically second-round effects that result in inflation, even temporary inflation increases feeding on themselves. That's the short-term. Big increase in inflation expectations can give an inflation pickup more staying power. That's a possibility.

I do think that we have signs of shortages of workers in the near-term, despite the fact that we're still more than 8 million jobs short of where we were in February 2020. Nevertheless, it is harder to find workers in a number of industries than you might expect in that environment. And I think there are a number of reasons for that.