Fed on hold as officials weigh pandemic against vaccines, fiscal support
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[January 27, 2021] By
Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Federal Reserve
is expected to keep U.S. monetary policy locked in crisis-fighting mode
at its meeting ending on Wednesday as policymakers assess an economy
still struggling through the shock of a pandemic but looking forward to
relief from ongoing vaccinations and new government spending plans.
Over its last few meetings the Fed has rolled out significant changes to
U.S. policy, linking any future increase in interest rates to a
persistent rise in inflation, and tying any change in its $120 billion
in monthly bond purchases to "substantial further progress" on its
employment and inflation targets.
If anything, economic data since the Fed met in December has
disappointed, and analysts say central bank policymakers will likely
fend off any suggestion that the economic boost from vaccines or a
possible surge in prices this spring will cause them to waver on the
promise of continued loose monetary policy.
Graphic: Inflation outlook improves -
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-FED/INFLATION/
bdwvkyloovm/chart.png
Like many economists, Oxford Economics Chief U.S. Financial Economist
Kathy Bostjancic said she anticipates a "mini-boom" beginning in the
spring as more of the population is vaccinated, people feel freer to
travel and spend, and the Biden administration's own spending plans
moved forward.
About 25 million people had received at least one of the required two
vaccine doses as of Sunday, and Biden hopes to boost the pace of daily
shots to 1.5 million. He has requested an additional $1.9 trillion in
government spending to speed vaccinations and expand benefits available
for households and businesses.
Though that could fuel faster economic growth, "Powell will maintain his
dovish tone for now," by noting that inflation remains below the Fed's
2% annual target and the level of jobs is still about 10 million short
of its pre-pandemic level, Bostjancic wrote.
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Chairman of the Federal Reserve Jerome Powell listens during a
Senate Banking Committee hearing on "The Quarterly CARES Act Report
to Congress" on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., December 1, 2020.
Susan Walsh/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo
Since approval of the first coronavirus vaccines in December, Fed
officials have shared a general view that the U.S. economy was likely
entering what one called the "endgame" of the pandemic, with short-term
risks but a likely buoyant second half of this year.
However they've also noted the large hole left in the economy,
particularly the job market, after a year that saw activity crash
spectacularly last spring and come back only partially so far due to the
ongoing health crisis. The United States actually lost jobs in December.
Many of the steps that the Fed took last spring in response to the onset
of recession, including slashing interest rates to zero, are now
expected to remain in place for a potentially extended period of time -
with policymakers not anticipating the need to raise interest rates for
perhaps three years.
That's designed to help push the economy onto a path of both higher
employment and one that meets, after years of misses, the Fed's 2%
inflation goal.
Investors appear to have taken the Fed's higher inflation talk
seriously. The expected inflation rate over the longer term as measured
by Treasury securities indexed for inflation has moved above 2%. Fed
officials themselves have begun laying the foundation to ignore what's
expected to be a spike in prices this spring and summer, spurred by
faster economic activity but also distorted by comparison to weak prices
last year.
"The rebound in market-based inflation compensation measures will not
alarm the Fed," said Paul Ashworth, chief U.S. economist for Capital
Economics. "Instead, Fed officials are more likely to view the rise as a
welcome vindication of the tweaks they made to the policy framework."
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Andrea Ricci)
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