Increasingly risky to
delay U.S. rate hike, Fed's Rosengren says
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[September 09, 2016]
QUINCY, Mass. (Reuters) - The
Federal Reserve, long hesitant to raise U.S. interest rates,
increasingly faces risks if it waits too much longer so a gradual policy
tightening is likely appropriate, a top Fed official said on Friday.
In another sign that a U.S. rate hike is approaching, Boston Fed
President Eric Rosengren said "risks to the forecast are becoming
increasingly two-sided." That means that while a slowdown overseas
remains a concern, the U.S. economy has proven resilient and could even
overheat if Fed policy remains unchanged for too much longer, he said.
Rosengren, an historically dovish Fed policymaker who has become more
confident about hiking rates this year, cited Britain's vote to leave
the European Union as an example of U.S. resistance to shocks from
abroad. "There are also longer-term risks from significantly
overshooting the U.S. economy's growth," he said.
"If we want to ensure that we remain at full employment, gradual
tightening is likely to be appropriate," said Rosengren, a voter on the
Fed's policy committee this year.
"A reasonable case can be made for continuing to pursue a gradual
normalization of monetary policy," he added in prepared remarks to the
South Shore Chamber of Commerce in Quincy, Massachusetts.
The Fed lifted rates from near zero last December - the first rate hike
in nearly a decade - but has since stood pat given an economic slump at
home and volatile markets overseas. While investors and economists see a
slight chance of a hike at a Fed policy meeting in two weeks, a move in
December is seen as more likely.
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The Federal Reserve Bank of Boston's President and CEO Eric S.
Rosengren speaks during the "Hyman P. Minsky Conference on the State
of the U.S. and World Economies", in New York, April 17, 2013.
REUTERS/Keith Bedford
Rosengren did not mention whether he expects a rate hike before year
end, yet the message appeared to fall in line with that of Fed Chair
Janet Yellen who said last month that the case was "strengthening" to
raise rates.
The "modest" wage pressures so far this year mean the labor market is tightening
and could well exceed "full employment" next year, Rosengren said. For the rest
of this year, U.S. GDP growth will likely rebound and run above a 2-percent rate
over the next two quarters, he added.
(Reporting by Svea Herbst-Bayliss; Writing by Jonathan Spicer; Editing by Chizu
Nomiyama)
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