Wage growth puzzle on next week's Jackson Hole agenda
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[August 17, 2018]
By Ann Saphir
(Reuters) - Federal Reserve Chair Jerome
Powell and other central bankers meeting in Grand Teton National Park
next week plan a deep dive into the root causes of stubbornly low
inflation, slow wage growth and tepid productivity gains, all of which
have dogged growth in the United States and other developed economies
for years.
The Kansas City Fed, which each year in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, puts on
one of the world's most attentively watched economic symposiums, won't
publish the program for the event until it starts next Thursday evening.
But on Friday it released a description of topics to be discussed,
including how increased market concentration in many industries may be
slowing productivity and wage growth, and how a shift to online
retailing may be making it harder for firms to raise prices.
"Understanding the implications of these changes for inflation, pricing
dynamics, productivity and growth is vital for policymakers as they seek
to promote conditions that can best foster long-run sustainable growth
with stable prices," the Kansas City Fed said.
Powell, who headlines the conference with a talk on monetary policy next
Friday morning, has called low wage growth a "bit of a puzzle," given
3.9 percent unemployment and an economy growing much faster than the
less than 2-percent annual pace many economists believe is its natural
speed limit.
[to top of second column] |
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell reacts to questioning by Rep.
Sean Duffy, R-WI, during his testimony before a House Financial
Services Committee hearing on the "Semiannual Monetary Policy Report
to Congress", at the Rayburn House Office Building in Washington,
U.S., July 18, 2018. REUTERS/Mary F. Calvert
Hourly U.S. earnings grew 2.7 percent last month from a year earlier, only
slightly faster than the current rate of inflation of around 2 percent.
Labor activists opposed to Powell's interest-rate increases plan to put on their
own academic panel on slow wage growth just outside the conference venue, a few
hours before the symposium typically gets started with cocktails and dinner.
Organizers want the Fed to stop raising rates, designed to slow hiring and
investment to prevent the economy overheating, because they believe the labor
market needs the boost that continued low borrowing costs can deliver. They say
they have invited conference participants to attend, though it is unclear how
many will.
(Reporting by Ann Saphir; Editing by Phil Berlowitz)
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