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			 In a Reuters interview, Rosengren said the slowdown in hiring last 
			month effectively heightens his sensitivity to the economy's 
			performance the rest of the year. If it grows at less than a 
			2-percent pace, or if unemployment rises from 5.1 percent now, he 
			would probably prefer to wait until next year for the 
			much-anticipated rate hike. 
 The straightforward comments could help clarify what the U.S. 
			central bank means by its "data-dependent" approach to deciding when 
			to tighten monetary policy, an approach that has caused confusion 
			among investors and economists since the Fed delayed the policy 
			change last month.
 
 Rosengren, a dovish Fed official who regains a vote on policy next 
			year, said he does not need to see actual evidence that inflation or 
			wages are rising in order to back an initial rate hike. But the 
			labor market, which is much improved since the recession, is key.
 
			
			 
			"This was definitely a weak employment report," he told Reuters over 
			the weekend at the Boston Fed.
 "We need to understand whether (it) was an anomaly or whether it was 
			symptomatic of greater weakness in the economy than we were 
			expecting," he added. "One report alone doesn't tell us that, so 
			we'll have to see the incoming data."
 
 The U.S. economy added a lower-than-expected 142,000 jobs in 
			September, according to a government report that also slashed August 
			employment growth and that showed little in wage gains for workers. 
			Factories were hit particularly hard, reflecting a global economic 
			slowdown and the strong dollar.
 
 Investors reacted Friday by cutting the perceived chances of a Fed 
			rate hike in December to only 30 percent, this despite repeated 
			assurances in recent weeks from Chair Janet Yellen and other Fed 
			policymakers that they expect to act this year.
 
 Asked whether he would back a rate hike if the market probability 
			remained at 30 percent, Rosengren said: "Yes, if it was the 
			appropriate action to take."
 
			
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			"I don't think the markets have veto power over what we're going to 
			be doing," he said, adding that those probabilities would likely 
			rise if economic data improves.
 The Fed has kept its key rate near zero since the depths of the 
			financial crisis in late 2008.
 
 The question now, Rosengren said, is whether U.S. consumption and 
			other pockets of strength can offset weakness among exporters and 
			other sectors of the economy hurt by weak commodity prices and 
			global activity.
 
 While the decision is for the committee to take, Rosengren said he 
			would delay hiking rates until 2016 "if it looks like the data is 
			weak enough that either the unemployment rate is going up, or that 
			growth looks like it's going to be less than 2 to 2.5 percent, over 
			the second half of this year."
 
 But "if we wait too long then we run the risk of raising rates more 
			abruptly, and I think that just increases the probability that we 
			make more mistakes," he said.
 
 (Reporting by Jonathan Spicer)
 
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