The world is turning the page on 2021 and welcoming 2022, leading to an assessment of the past 12 months and looking ahead to the next 365 days.
Over the past year, the economy was dominated by a handful of developments: inflation, a global supply chain crisis, the Delta and Omicron coronavirus variants, trillions of dollars in fiscal spending, and the easing of monetary policy.
In November, the U.S. annual inflation rate rose to 6.8 percent, a 39-year high. The personal consumption expenditure (PCE) price index, the Federal Reserve’s favorite inflation gauge, climbed by 5.7 percent, the highest increase in nearly 40 years.
The year 2021 might have provided a different Christmas shopping experience than what many shoppers are accustomed to at this time of the year. Whether it was a scarcity of products or surging prices, the international supply chain crisis affected the holiday season in 2021.
A historic traffic jam at Chinese and U.S. ports, a backlog of shipping containers, public health restrictions, a truck driver shortage, and soaring simultaneous worldwide demand all contributed to shoppers altering their gift-giving plans. But the supply chain fiasco has affected more than just buying a child’s favorite toy.
The situation has added to the energy crunch witnessed across Europe and Asia, forcing these markets to ramp up coal production and eat into their crude strategic reserves.
The U.S. labor market has been a mixed bag in 2021.
The U.S. economy is still short between 4 and 6 million jobs from before the COVID-19 pandemic, though job openings are close to an all-time high of 11 million. Average hourly earnings increased at an annualized rate of 4.8 percent in November to 31.03, but real wage growth has been eliminated in most sectors due to escalating inflation. First-time jobless claims are at a pandemic low, while the labor force participation rate is at a 45-year low of 61.8 percent.
The financial markets panicked when the World Health Organization (WHO) called an emergency meeting to discuss a new COVID-19 variant. Many analysts warned that a new strain could weigh on the economic outlook, be it retail trade activity or crude oil demand.
While the Delta variant has affected the economy in 2021, Omicron has triggered some consternation about the global economic recovery during the year’s home stretch. Public health experts assert that it’s still too early to judge the severity of Omicron, but investors and policymakers have been worried, leading to sharp selloffs in financial markets and to renewed pandemic-related restrictions.
Across the globe, central banks have started to taper their quantitative easing measures that were established to cushion the economic blows from COVID-19.
The Federal Reserve began trimming its $120-billion-per-month stimulus and relief efforts, with the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) also anticipating at least three rate hikes in 2022.
The Bank of Canada, Bank of England (BoE), and European Central Bank joined the tapering bandwagon. However, BoE moved on interest rates before many of its Western counterparts, hiking the benchmark rate to 0.25 percent and surprising many market observers.
The U.S. government approved trillions of dollars in new spending in 2021, including the $1.9 trillion stimulus bill in March. President Joe Biden also signed off on a measure raising the debt ceiling by $2.5 trillion.
Although the House voted for the $1.75 trillion social-spending and climate change investment Build Back Better Act, the legislation’s future is in jeopardy in the Senate. Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) said he wouldn’t vote for the measure, leaving many left-leaning officials on Capitol Hill doubtful that it will make its way to the president’s desk in the New Year.
Despite the numerous setbacks in the United States, surveys suggest that the economic recovery might be poised for a strong finish in 2021.
Reading the Tea Leaves in 2022
From Omicron variant fears to Biden’s $1.75 trillion spending initiative potentially on its knees, financial institutions have lowered their 2022 economic outlooks.Goldman Sachs was one of the first major Wall Street firms to slash its forecasts for the U.S. economy over the next year, citing “modest downside” from the new variant.
The Wall Street giant projects that the U.S. gross domestic product will expand by 2.9 percent in 2022, down from its previous estimate of 3.3 percent.
Others aver that it could be too premature to determine if the Omicron variant will play a critical role in the broader economy in 2022.
“It is simply too earlier for it to show in activity data,” Jefferies economist Aneta Markowska wrote in a weekly note.
“But we are not so sure,” Knightley said.
“Firms have millions of job vacancies to fill, so competition to find workers with the right skill set will remain intense. Demand-supply issues are a global phenomenon with semiconductor producers warning shortages could last through 2023. In an environment of strong demand, record order backlogs, and ongoing supply constraints, cost increases can continue to be passed onto customers.”
Market analysts and economists will be paying attention to the scaling back of monetary policy and its effect on the financial markets and the overall economy.