Fed's Williams says policymakers need to better prepare
for lower interest rate world
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[May 14, 2019]
(Reuters) - Torturously slow recoveries
from recessions and low inflation are here to stay unless policymakers
can get a better grip on how to stabilize the global economy in an era
of lower interest rates, a top Federal Reserve policymaker said on
Tuesday.
"Experience teaches us that it is better to prepare for the future than
wait too long," New York Fed President John Williams said in remarks
prepared for delivery at a policy conference in Zurich, Switzerland.
"Ultimately, failure to prepare often means preparation for failure."
Lower birthrates are keeping population growth down in the world's
wealthier economies and technological advancement has shifted down to
more normal levels. Each trend is capping how much economies can grow,
Williams said.
The lower growth leads to less investment and aging populations in those
advanced economies increases saving. Lower demand for and a higher
supply of savings has reduced the "neutral" level of interest rates
around the world that would, in theory, not restrict or heat up the
economy.
Those factors keep rates close to zero, where they lose their potency to
respond to a recession, the economist argued, adding that there is no
sign that "neutral" rates will go back to previously normal levels
absent a change in demographics or a scientific or technological
breakthrough. The Fed has set rates in the United States between
2.25-2.50%, but they are lower and in some cases even negative in
places, such as Japan and Europe.
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John C. Williams,
president and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York speaks to
the Economic Club of New York in the Manhattan borough of New York,
U.S., March 6, 2019. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson/File Photo
Williams, who earlier in his career was a researcher at the San Francisco Fed,
is known for helping develop estimates of what the "neutral" interest rate might
be. Now, he is pushing to encode some of that thinking in how the Fed approaches
inflation from now on.
As part of a broad policy review, Williams has been advocating for the Fed to
systematically respond to periods of tepid inflation by keeping U.S. interest
rates "lower for longer."
But any alternatives to the Fed's current approach could be controversial,
raising questions about whether the Fed can actually live up to even more
complex commitments to meet a 2% inflation target it has frequently missed.
The Fed's preferred measure of inflation, the "core" personal consumption
expenditures (PCE) price index excluding the volatile food and energy
components, slowed to an annual rate of 1.6% in March.
"Investors view these low inflation readings not as an aberration, but rather a
new normal," Williams said.
(Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt; Editing by Lisa Shumaker
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