Powell expected to begin laying out Fed's new monetary policy approach
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[August 27, 2020]
By Jonnelle Marte
(Reuters) - Federal Reserve Chair Jerome
Powell is expected on Thursday to begin setting out the U.S. central
bank's new strategy for meeting its price stability and maximum
employment goals, a long-anticipated overhaul that comes amid a deep
economic crisis and just months before Americans vote in a contentious
election.
With tens of millions of people out of work because of the fallout from
the coronavirus pandemic and the campaign for the Nov. 3 presidential
election fast underway, the Fed is looking to completely transform the
way it manages monetary policy to adapt to a world where interest rates
- and most inflation metrics - are perpetually low.
The Kansas City Fed will kick off its annual economic symposium on
Thursday morning, an event that is usually held in the mountain resort
of Jackson Hole, Wyoming, but is being conducted virtually this year
because of the pandemic. After this week's event and the mid-September
policy meeting, Fed officials will not meet again until the day after
the election.
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Powell is expected to discuss the results of the Fed's framework review,
an initiative started nearly two years ago through public hearings and
research to explore how monetary policy should be adapted for a low
interest rate environment. He is scheduled to begin his speech at 9:10
a.m. EDT (1310 GMT).
The Fed chief may lay out a case for why higher inflation over the long
term may be a positive for the economy, though some analysts expect the
speech will be short on details for how the central bank plans to enact
this approach.
"The main gist of the message is likely to point to a desire to
overshoot inflation but to no specific policies for getting there,"
Roberto Perli and Benson Durham of Cornerstone Macro wrote in a note on
Wednesday.
The thrust of Powell's argument may be centered around the view,
embraced by several Fed officials during the record-long economic
expansion that preceded the pandemic, that the U.S. economy can handle
very low levels of unemployment before it encounters higher wages or
rampant inflation.
That could mean the Fed embraces the idea of tolerating inflation that
is above its 2% target to allow for stronger labor market gains.
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Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, wearing a face mask, testifies
before the House of Representatives Financial Services Committee
during a hearing on oversight of the Treasury Department and Federal
Reserve response to the outbreak of the coronavirus disease
(COVID-19), on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., June 30, 2020.
Tasos Katopodis/Pool via REUTERS
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REDUCING INEQUALITY
The central bank has persistently undershot its inflation target
since it was formally established in 2012, and some economists say
raising interest rates preemptively out of concern about future
jumps in inflation can cut off labor market gains before workers on
the margins can reap the benefits.
Through the framework review, the Fed could potentially clarify that
it is okay with lower unemployment rates as long as inflation
remains "under control" said David Wilcox, former head of the Fed's
research division and now a senior fellow at the Washington-based
Peterson Institute for International Economics.
The Fed could also use the review as a chance to formally
acknowledge what Powell and other policymakers have said several
times: that hot labor markets can help to reduce inequality because
they "disproportionately" benefit Black, Hispanic and other workers
who have been left out.
"The overriding goal of the Review has been to devise ways for the
Federal Reserve to recoup part of the recession-fighting ability it
has lost over the past few decades due to the worldwide decline in
the normal level of interest rates," Wilcox wrote in a note on
Wednesday.
The Jackson Hole gathering of top central bankers has been used in
the past by Fed chiefs to signal policy shifts.
Powell spoke of the uncertainty over trade policy at the 2019
conference, but a lot more is up in the air this year, including how
fast the coronavirus will spread, how many more people will die from
the COVID-19 disease associated with the virus and whether U.S.
lawmakers will deliver a new economic rescue package to help
struggling businesses and households.
(Reporting by Jonnelle Marte; Editing by Paul Simao)
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