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						Trump win creates 
						'considerable' uncertainty, Fed's Dudley says 
						
		 
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		 [December 06, 2016] 
		By Jonathan Spicer 
		 
		 
		NEW 
		YORK (Reuters) - The U.S. election of Donald Trump has created 
		"considerable" uncertainty over the policies he will pursue so it is too 
		soon for the Federal Reserve to judge whether its plan for gradual 
		interest rate hikes needs adjusting, one of the most influential Fed 
		policymakers said on Monday. 
		 
		In a speech that stepped well into fiscal policy, including a nod to 
		rising debt levels and a prescription for more predictable actions from 
		Washington, New York Fed President William Dudley painted a fairly 
		benign picture of the current U.S. economy. 
		 
		He cited firming wage growth and said he expects further improvement in 
		both the labor market and in pushing inflation a bit higher toward a Fed 
		target of 2 percent. 
		 
		"Assuming the economy stays on this trajectory, I would favor making 
		monetary policy somewhat less accommodative over time by gradually 
		pushing up the level of short-term interest rates," said Dudley, a 
		permanent voter on monetary policy and a close ally of Fed Chair Janet 
		Yellen. 
						
		  
						
		"There is still considerable uncertainty about how fiscal policy will 
		evolve over the next few years. At this juncture, it is premature to 
		reach firm conclusions," he told a breakfast of the nonprofit 
		Association for a Better New York, without mentioning the 
		president-elect by name. 
		 
		Since last month's election of the Republican Trump as president, 
		stocks, bond yields and the dollar have all risen. Dudley called this a 
		"tightening" in market conditions, but not one that concerns him since 
		it appears to be driven by expectations of more government spending that 
		should boost the economy. 
		 
		If that happens, and if the U.S. central bank, in response, raises rates 
		more than currently expected, he said the investor reaction is 
		"appropriate," though he would wait to adjust monetary policy 
		expectations as the fiscal picture becomes clearer, he added. 
		 
		Trump was elected on a platform of infrastructure spending, tax cuts, 
		cuts to government regulations, and the renegotiation or halting of 
		international trade agreements. The election, which shocked pollsters, 
		has only hardened already high expectations that the Fed will raise 
		rates a quarter-percentage point to 0.5-0.75 percent on Dec. 14. 
		 
		Less clear is how aggressively the central bank will continue to tighten 
		policy next year. 
			
			
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			William Dudley, President of the New York Federal Reserve Bank, 
			speaks at Brooklyn College in the Brooklyn borough of New York, 
			March 7, 2014. REUTERS/Keith Bedford/File Photo 
            
			
  
Wading 
into the debate over what policies the Republican-controlled White House and 
Congress should pursue, Dudley said "monetary policy could use an assist from 
fiscal policy," given low rates are unlikely to get too much higher before the 
next economic downturn. 
 
It is "important that the United States retains sufficient fiscal capacity so 
that fiscal policy can support the economy when the next cyclical downturn does 
occur," said Dudley, noting that debt service costs will nearly double over the 
next decade. 
 
The Fed policymaker repeated that he backs "automatic" fiscal stabilizers like 
higher unemployment compensation when the jobless rate rises. It has fallen to 
4.6 percent. 
 
Dudley, a dovish member of the core Fed policymakers, said the economy is now 
"in reasonably good shape" and that he expects it to grow at a 1.8 percent rate 
or slightly more in 2017. 
 
(Editing by Jeffrey Benkoe) 
				 
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