Fed's internal split tied
to dueling views on jobs outlook
Send a link to a friend
[September 24, 2016]
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - The split
at the Federal Reserve over when to next raise interest rates appears to
hinge largely on disagreements over the labor market outlook, comments
from policymakers on Friday suggest.
When the Fed earlier this week decided to stand pat on rates, Fed Chair
Janet Yellen said she felt the labor market had more room to run before
it could overheat.
Three of 10 voting policymakers dissented, saying they preferred an
immediate hike rather than the deferral until later in the year that
most saw as appropriate.
On Friday one of the dissenters, Boston Fed chief Eric Rosengren,
explained that his vote turned on his view that sharply falling
unemployment could create a spike in inflation and actually trigger a
recession.
"Unemployment this low may well have the desirable effect of bringing
more workers into the labor force – but, unfortunately, only
temporarily," said Rosengren. Raising rates slightly and gradually,
said, could prevent overheating in the labor market and allow the
recovery to continue longer than otherwise.
Two other dissenters, Kansas City Fed President Esther George and
Cleveland Fed President Loretta Mester have not comment on their
decision to dissent as of Friday.
Comments from other Fed policymakers on Friday, however, underscored
that a deep wedge in views on the labor market outlook is driving
differences of opinion on when to raise rates.
Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari, responding to questions from
the public on Twitter, said he believed the labor market continues to
have slack and that he wanted to see the unemployment rate, now at 4.9
percent, to come down. The bigger worry for him, he said, was that the
Fed will raise rates too soon rather than too late.
[to top of second column] |
United States Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen holds a news
conference following the two-day Federal Open Market Committee
meeting in Washington, U.S., September 21, 2016. REUTERS/Gary
Cameron
The view that the labor market is not close to overheating is also central to
Dallas Fed President Robert Kaplan's view that the Fed should be patient and
cautious in raising rates.
"We don't think the economy is overheating," said Kaplan, who like Kashkari will
rotate into a voting slot on the Fed's policy-setting panel next year. "We are
not as accommodative as people would think."
The Fed will have three monthly government reports on the state of the U.S.
labor market in hand before its meeting in December, when many traders and
economists expect it to finally pull the trigger on a rate hike.
(Reporting by Ann Saphir in San Francisco and Lindsay Dunsmuir in Washington;
Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|