Economic index shows reduced uncertainty, more stability in Midwest
(The Center Square) – The Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago’s Survey of Economic Conditions Activity Index suggests more stability and less uncertainty across five Midwestern states.
Thom Walstrum, Principal Business Economist for the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, said the index increased to +1 in August from –22 in July.
“The survey reading for August was surprisingly strong, given what other similar indicators are saying, but there’s also a fair amount of noise in this indicator. It tends to be jagged, move up one month after moving down the next,” Walstrum said.
The Fed’s Seventh District survey includes Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan and Wisconsin.
Walstrum said the report’s three-month averages are more in line with other indicators.
“Sales growth continues to be positive but a little bit below average. I would say the same with hiring, according to our contacts, is positive, growing, but below average as well,” Walstrum said.
Many Illinois politicians have suggested that federal policy measures from the Trump administration have caused economic uncertainty.
Walstrum said data reflected an increase in uncertainty related to federal policy earlier this year, but there appears to be less uncertainty than there was three-to-six months ago.
It’s good news that the latest survey shows stable growth, Walstrum said.
“It went pretty negative in the spring, and it’s been rising ever since. I think the stability after there was a lot of uncertainty to start the year, things have kind of stabilized in a sense and outlooks have been improving,” Walstrum said.
Walstrum said the survey is a short-run indicator. To the extent that any type of government policy might play a role in the data, Walstrum said it would almost always be federal policy and not state or local policy.
Input cost growth has been going up and price growth has been growing, which is in line with the inflation data, Walstrum said.
The Chicago Fed’s National Financial Conditions Index was unchanged at -0.56 in the week ending Aug. 22, suggesting steady financial conditions.
Latest News Stories
WATCH: Newsom says he’s an alternate to White House ‘chaos’ in his final State of the State
Prosecutor calls Newsom ‘king of fraud’ for oversight failures
Seattle’s new mayor has no plans to look into possible local daycare fraud
Foreign national charged with having gun near ICE agents in Chicago
Tariffs sink Canadian couples’ long-running e-commerce operation
Attorneys file request to Supreme Court over gender secrecy
Pritzker signs energy omnibus with new charge for ratepayers in 2030
Illinois quick hits: Primary election ballot certified; indictments increased in 2025
Trump orders $200 billion mortgage bond buy to lower rates
Coal and power groups back UP–Norfolk Southern rail merger
WATCH: U.S. House votes to extend ACA subsidies, heads to Senate
Report details sexual abuse, falsified grant applications at Chicago Public Schools