That dour view may come as a surprise given that the Federal
Reserve raised interest rates earlier this month and plans to
continue to do so gradually to keep the U.S. economy from
overheating. Rising interest rates often signal optimism about
economic prospects.
But, San Francisco Federal Reserve President John Williams said
Tuesday, while the economic news is encouraging in the
short-term, over the longer run it is bound to disappoint.
Aging demographics and a productivity slowdown are putting the
brakes on global growth, he said in remarks prepared for
delivery to Macquarie University in Sydney, with long-run yearly
trend growth in the U.S., the euro area, the U.K. and Canada now
estimated at just 1.5 percent. That is about half the normal
pace before the financial crisis.
With growth so lackluster, monetary policymakers will have a
harder time managing inflation and maintaining full employment.
That is because lower growth reduces the demand for investment
and pushes down on interest rates, leaving central banks less
room to cut rates to offset an economic shock.
Unless fiscal policymakers make investments in education, job
training, infrastructure and research and development to boost
output despite a slow-growing workforce, "monetary policy will
be severely challenged to achieve stable prices, well-anchored
inflation expectations, and strong macroeconomic performance,"
Williams said.
(Writing by Ann Saphir; Editing by Diane Craft)
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|
|