Exclusive-Fed's Bostic says 'reasonable' to begin bond-buying taper in
October
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[August 27, 2021] By
Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - It would be
"reasonable" for the Federal Reserve to trim its bond-buying program
beginning in October if strong job gains continue, Atlanta Fed President
Raphael Bostic said in the latest call by a U.S. central banker to start
tapering the purchases soon and end them fast.
The Fed has been buying $120 billion in U.S. Treasury bonds and
mortgage-backed securities each month to stem the economic fallout from
the coronavirus pandemic, but is now moving toward reducing the stimulus
as the recovery gains momentum.
"I would be comfortable with an October timeline for starting this" if
U.S. job growth in August matches the nearly one million jobs that were
added in each of the previous two months, Bostic told Reuters in an
interview published on Friday.
The Fed could announce a plan to "taper" the asset purchases at its
Sept. 21-22 policy meeting. A change is expected sometime this year,
with debate still unfolding over when the plan should be announced and
how fast the purchases should be reduced.
Bostic said that, once the taper started, he was "definitely looking to
get this done as quickly as possible," and could support a full end to
the Fed's asset purchases "toward the end of Q1" of 2022.
He spoke to Reuters ahead of the Fed's marquee Jackson Hole research
conference, which will be kicked off with a speech on Friday by Fed
Chair Jerome Powell. Bostic is a voting member of the Fed's
policy-setting committee this year, and joins a vocal group of mostly
Fed regional bank presidents who are ready to end one of the central
bank's signature pandemic programs.
Beyond the taper debate, however, Bostic delved into the Fed's
next-phase discussion of when to raise interest rates.
Since early this year he has said he expected inflation to be stronger
than expected, and anticipated the Fed will need to lift its benchmark
overnight interest rate above the current near-zero level sometime in
2022 - a step towards tempering the economic expansion to ensure prices
remain under control. Most of his colleagues don't see rates rising
until 2023 or later.
But more fundamental than the timing, Bostic said he felt Fed officials
needed to begin to talk more precisely about how their new inflation
approach will play out in practice, particularly now that the pace of
price increases has run faster, for longer, than expected.
Inflation this year is pushing 4%, and the pace of the price hikes has
been so strong this year that it has pushed average U.S. inflation over
a period of several years up to the Fed's 2% target.
Number of payroll jobs below Feb. 2020 https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-FED/JOBS/egvbkkqldpq/chart.png
Under a new approach adopted a year ago, the Fed is focusing on that
average figure and will allow high-inflation "overshoots" to help reach
it. But the central bank is not explicit on how long the averaging
period should run or how much of an overshoot might be tolerated.
"By some metrics that are straightforward we have already met the goal,"
Bostic said, adding that the Fed will face inevitable questions about
what yardstick it will use. "We should be transparent to the
marketplace. This is our first round going through this and approaching
this benchmark, so I do think there is value in thinking about how to
communicate and signal more directly where we think we are."
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Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta President Raphael Bostic
participates in a panel discussion at the American Economic
Association/Allied Social Science Association (ASSA) 2019 meeting in
Atlanta, Georgia, U.S., January 4, 2019. REUTERS/Christopher Aluka
Berry//File Photo
A second pledge, to get the economy to "maximum employment," is also undefined,
but assessments of that will have to be a "game-time decision" for Fed officials
weighing the labor market recovery against inflation risks that may emerge,
Bostic said.
The Fed has said the job gains should be "broad-based and inclusive," but Bostic
said at the same time "there is not a consensus view on a metric" for measuring
the completeness of a jobs recovery.
"There is not a clean analogue on the employment side relative to what we have
for inflation," he said. If an interest rate hike seems required, but the job
recovery seems less than finished among different demographic groups,
"policymakers ... will have to decide and weigh the risks of forbearance ...
There is a learning curve to how it is going to play out."
'THE MATH'
For the more imminent decision about the bond-buying taper, however, Bostic said
the numbers are starting to add up.
A gain of around 700,000 or more jobs in August would mean the U.S. economy will
have reclaimed half of the 10 million jobs missing because of the pandemic as of
last December, when the Fed promised it would continue its bond purchases until
there had been "substantial further progress" in the recovery.
"That is the math that I am doing," Bostic said.
Inflation, on average Inflation, on average
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-FED/FRAMEWORK/
byvrjjmbkve/chart.png
There are other calculations in the mix, including to what extent a surge in
coronavirus cases fueled by the highly contagious Delta coronavirus variant
hurts the economy.
Concerns about COVID-19 risks prompted the cancellation last week of the
in-person portion of the Fed's Jackson Hole conference in Wyoming. It will be
held on a virtual platform for the second year in a row.
The shift highlighted the risks the Fed faces as it plans its transition from
emergency programs set in place in the spring of 2020 to policies needed to
manage bursts of both economic growth and inflation more reminiscent of the
1970s.
Bostic said the rise and spread of the Delta variant had not changed his
economic outlook in any fundamental way so far.
"What I have seen is some suggestion that things are slowing down, but they are
still just slowing from extremely high levels. I have not seen big changes in
the underlying dynamic," Bostic said.
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Paul Simao)
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