Fed’s Beige Book Confirms Stalled Job Market, Increased Prices, and Underwhelming Consumer Spending

January 16, 2026

Fed’s Beige Book Confirms Stalled Job Market, Increased Prices, and Underwhelming Consumer Spending

This week, the Federal Reserve released its January 2026 ‘Beige Book,’ which provides a detailed look at economic conditions in all 12 Federal Reserve Districts, including consumer spending, labor markets, and pricing patterns. The report, which has been shown to have strong predictive power for economic recessions, suggests the new year is off to a slow economic start, as retailers and business owners report anxiety about consumer spending and the labor market stalls out. Anemic economic growth across the country reflects anxiety among working families who are paying higher prices for health insurance, groceries, and utilities, among other major budget items.

Groundwork’s Chief of Policy and Advocacy, Alex Jacquez, shared his reaction:

“January’s Beige Book isn’t a surprise: Americans are facing higher prices and stagnant wages. Trump’s disastrous tariff policies and his choice to let critical premium tax credits expire, hiking up health insurance rates on working families, don’t help matters. Business owners and consumers alike are rightly anxious about rising economic insecurity, and Trump and Republicans have hung them out to dry.”

BACKGROUND

The Federal Reserve’s Beige Book plays a critical role in informing monetary policy decisions by highlighting regional economic conditions gathered from contacts at businesses, banks, and community organizational contacts at each of the 12 Federal Reserve Districts. Beige Book and its findings have demonstrated remarkable predictive power for economic recessions and explanatory power in nowcasting economic indicators that otherwise lag, including GDP. In the January edition of the Beige Book, contacts reported that: