Fed's Williams says U.S.
economy in good shape, wants rate hike
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[September 07, 2016]
RENO, Nev. (Reuters) - A top Federal
Reserve official on Tuesday repeated his call for gradual interest rate
hikes, evidently unfazed by a slowdown in U.S. job gains and
sluggishness in the services sector that now has traders betting against
any rate hike at all this year.
It "makes sense to get back to a pace of gradual rate increases,
preferably sooner rather than later," San Francisco Fed President John
Williams said in remarks prepared for delivery to the Hayek Group.
In his prepared remarks Williams did not address the release of data on
Tuesday that showed activity in the U.S. services sector had hit a
six-and-a-half-year low, or government data last Friday that showed U.S.
employers added fewer jobs than expected in August.
Williams said the economy was in "good shape," and he forecast
unemployment, now at 4.9 percent, to fall to 4.5 percent in the coming
year and inflation to rise to the Fed's 2 percent target in the next
year or two.
Longer-term, however, Williams made it clear he is far from comfortable
with the Fed's current approach to monetary policy.
Targeting low inflation, as the Fed and many other central banks
currently do, simply will not work well in a world where economic growth
and interest rates are likely to be persistently lower than they were in
the era before the Great Recession, he said. A low inflation target, he
said, gives the Fed too small a buffer to fend off future shocks.
The Fed could raise its 2 percent inflation target to 3 percent or even
4 percent, or shift away from inflation targeting altogether and instead
target a nominal level of national economic output, Williams said.
He said that because it will take time to figure out which approach will
work best when faced with future downturns, the Fed needs to get
cracking.
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John Williams, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of San
Francisco, speaks during an interview with Reuters in San Francisco,
California December 18, 2015. REUTERS/Stephen Lam
"Time is not on our side," Williams said.
Williams first raised the idea of ripping up the Fed's monetary policy
playbook last month, when he also began advocating more strongly for a
rate hike.
Fed Chair Janet Yellen said last month that the Fed was not currently
actively considering any of the strategy shifts that Williams had argued
for, and it is not clear how much traction his ideas have gained.
(Reporting by Ann Saphir; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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