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Inflation Expectations Surge as Consumer Confidence Hits Record Low, Fed Faces New Pressure
Global Economy

Inflation Expectations Surge as Consumer Confidence Hits Record Low, Fed Faces New Pressure

Photography & Words by Arthur Sterling May 24, 2026 2 MIN READ
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On the day Kevin Warsh took the Federal Reserve helm, the University of Michigan released its latest consumer sentiment survey, exposing a worrying surge in inflation expectations. The overall sentiment index slipped for a third consecutive month, reaching a historic low that eclipses levels seen during the 1970s oil shock.

Year‑ahead inflation expectations edge higher

Households now see price growth of ↑ 4.8% over the next 12 months, up from 4.7% a month earlier and well above the 3.4% recorded before the Iran‑Hormuz conflict began. More unsettling is the rise in long‑run expectations to ↑ 3.9%, a jump from 3.5% in April and outside the 2024 target band of 2.8‑3.2%.

Political undercurrents

Unlike the tariff‑driven price spikes of the Trump era, the current energy surge stems from geopolitical tensions that the president cannot unilaterally resolve. Yet the data show that independents and Republicans—traditionally more skeptical of Fed policy—are now driving the upward swing in expectations, suggesting even Trump’s base doubts a quick relief.

“Consumers are increasingly convinced that inflation will spread beyond fuel, even in the long run,” said Joanne Hsu, director of the University of Michigan Surveys of Consumers.

Fed Governor Chris Waller warned that a succession of price shocks can rewire public perception, making it harder for policymakers to keep expectations anchored. He cautioned that if “inflation expectations start to become unanchored,” the Fed would not hesitate to raise the target range for the federal funds rate, though he labeled such a move “premature” pending further data.

The confluence of higher oil prices, lingering tariff debates, and a resurgence of long‑run inflation expectations creates a feedback loop: workers demand higher wages, firms raise prices, and the Fed faces a tighter policy dilemma.


Reported by Arthur Sterling (Macroeconomics Editor).

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