After nine years of U.S. recovery, Fed
sheds anxieties
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[June 14, 2018]
By Jonathan Spicer
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The Federal Reserve is
guiding a U.S. economy that is as close to ideal as it could have
dreamed a decade ago, when the darkest days of the recession forced it
to take big risks to protect workers, banks and economies around the
world from further devastation.
After nine years of steady if uneven recovery, the United States is now
growing at a pace topping 4 percent, unemployment is as low as it has
been this century, and inflation has safely edged up toward an official
target.
While a few items remain on the U.S. central bank's wish list, such as
bigger gains in wages and productivity, the main goals of stable prices
and full employment are effectively met.
The nightmares that long haunted both hawks and doves have not come to
pass, even as the Fed held interest rates near zero for years and
snapped up some $3.5 trillion in bonds in an extraordinary effort to
boost the recovery. Prices did not spike in response to the immense
monetary stimulus, nor has the job market cooled since 2015 when the Fed
began tightening policy.
The rate hike on Wednesday was the seventh in this cycle and effectively
marked a shift to a neutral stance in which the policy rate matches
inflation at just under 2 percent, leaving zero "real" accommodation.
"The Fed deserves tremendous credit for steering the economy to calmer
waters, supporting what is likely to be the longest expansion in U.S.
history while meeting inflation and employment objectives," said Stephen
Gallagher, chief U.S. economist at Societe Generale. "Fiscal policy
played a role during the crisis, but monetary policy was at the
forefront."
Fed Chair Jerome Powell underscored his own satisfaction with the
recovery in his remarks on Wednesday, saying the economy was in "great
shape" and even going so far as to hint that he no longer feels
constrained by the Janet Yellen-era fear of slipping back to zero
interest rates.
"I think we are far enough away now though that the risks are kind of
balanced," he said. "I think it's more just, we are just looking at the
economy and what does it need and how do we sustain the expansion, keep
the labor market strong and try to keep inflation near 2 percent."
The current economic expansion is the second-longest in U.S. history,
and will set a record if it lasts a bit more than a year longer.
At least on the immediate horizon, little appears to stand in the way,
given the government's $1.8 trillion in combined tax cuts and planned
spending. It is not until the stimulus starts to fade in late 2019 to
mid-2020 that a recession is likely, according to half of the
respondents to a National Association of Business Economics survey.
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A police officer keeps watch in front of the U.S. Federal Reserve
building in Washington, DC, U.S. on October 12, 2016. REUTERS/Kevin
Lamarque//File Photo
Fed Governor Lael Brainard, among the most dovish policymakers least
anxious to tighten, said on May 31 "the sizable fiscal stimulus that
is in train is likely to provide a tailwind to growth in the second
half of the year and beyond."
To be sure, the Fed is not inclined to hike rates any more than
gradually after years of mostly over-optimistic predictions for
inflation and economic growth, and disappointing wage gains of
around 2.5 percent annually. Another reason for caution is the White
House's threats of more tariffs, including on its closest allies,
raising questions over how international trade will affect growth.
But for now, the Atlanta Fed estimates the U.S. economy is roaring
at a 4.6 percent rate, a level it reached only twice since the
recession. Economists generally expect growth to remain above 3
percent through year end, while Fed policymakers raised their
forecast a touch to 2.8 percent on Wednesday.
That is a welcome step-up from the roughly 2-percent growth averaged
throughout the recovery, which was plagued by a series of crises
abroad and uncertainties at home, delaying the Fed's tightening
plans.
Job growth has consistently outperformed in recent years, driving
unemployment down to 3.8 percent in May, the lowest reading since
2000. Unemployment soared to 10 percent in 2009 and some 8.5 million
jobs were lost during the recession that set off a global downturn
and financial crisis.
Fast-forward to April of this year when data showed that U.S. job
openings jumped to a record high, far outpacing hiring. "This is the
most lopsided, mismatched labor market in the nation's history,"
said Chris Rupkey, chief financial economist at MUFG Union Bank.
"The labor market is on fire."
(Reporting by Jonathan Spicer; Editing by Andrea Ricci and Rosalba
O'Brien)
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