Fed walks tightrope between big jobs gap and rising
inflation
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[June 15, 2021] By
Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Federal Reserve
officials meet this week faced with ongoing tension between their two
main goals, as inflation rises faster than expected even with millions
of Americans still unemployed more than a year after the onset of the
coronavirus pandemic.
In a new policy statement and economic projections due on Wednesday, the
U.S. central bank is expected to point to continued strength in the
economy and acknowledge the first conversations among its policymakers
about when and how fast to pare back the massive bond-buying program
launched in 2020 to help battle the recession triggered by the pandemic.
Policymakers will also update their views on when the Fed should raise
its benchmark short-term interest rate from the current near-zero level,
with markets focused on whether the core group of central bank officials
shift a first expected rate increase into 2023 from 2024, where it stood
as of the last round of projections in March.
The Fed will be treading a fine line, having made a strong commitment to
use its monetary policy tools to regain the jobs lost to the pandemic
but aware of rumblings within its ranks over the possibility that the
economy has healed faster and inflation rebounded more forcefully than
expected - albeit with fewer workers involved.
(Graphic: Labor market index -
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-ECONOMY/LABORINDEX/
xlbpgkdropq/chart.png)
While policymakers expect the current friction to dissipate as the
complications of reopening the economy, rehiring workers, and restoring
supply chains get worked out, the process may take months. If the Fed
has misread the post-pandemic economic situation, it will be that much
further behind in preparing for faster rises in prices, Donald Kohn, a
former Fed vice chair, said last week at an American Enterprise
Institute event.
The Fed's current focus on using loose monetary policy to try to
generate ever more employment makes sense with so many people still out
of work, Kohn said, but "is not designed to deal with the upside risk on
inflation."
The last months of 2021, with the economy fully reopened and time to
work out the kinks, "will be a critical test ... to see whether the
hypothesis about easing supply constraints will be enough to keep
inflation under control," Kohn said.
This week's two-day meeting is likely to mark the start of what the Fed
hopes will be a smooth and gradual exit from the policies put in place
to fight the pandemic, with its $120 billion in monthly asset purchases
eventually reduced and then eliminated over time, followed later by a
slow climb in interest rates.
Throughout the pandemic, policymakers have said such a process would
take years to complete. Even recent high inflation readings have been
seen by most at the Fed as an outgrowth of the economic reopening that
would fade on its own without any need for a swift shift away from the
wide-open monetary policy being used to support hiring and the
incrementally tighter monetary policy, marked by higher borrowing costs,
that would be used to slow the economy and keep prices under control.
New economic projections from policymakers, which are due to be released
along with the policy statement at 2 p.m. EDT (1800 GMT) on Wednesday,
will show how that outlook has been reshaped, if at all, by data that
has pulled in two directions in recent months.
In December, the Fed said it would make no moves on any front until the
United States had made "substantial further progress" in bouncing back
from the pandemic.
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The Federal Reserve building is pictured in Washington, DC, U.S.,
August 22, 2018. REUTERS/Chris Wattie/File Photo
Fed Chief Jerome Powell in particular has emphasized the central bank's new view
of maximum employment as a "broad-based and inclusive" concept attentive to
whether racial minorities and women, for example, are reaping the benefits of
economic growth. Powell is scheduled to hold a news briefing after the release
of the policy statement and projections on Wednesday.
(Graphic: Substantial further progress for the Fed? -
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-ECONOMY/FEDPROGRESS/
nmovazmdypa/chart.png)
The progress since December has been mixed, and slower than the Fed had hoped.
Compared to expectations of job growth of a million or more per month, the
increase in nonfarm payrolls has averaged 460,000 per month in 2021. Overall,
the economy has regained only about a quarter of the jobs lost as of December;
the share of the adult population in a job, a measure many policymakers see as a
central measure of economic health, is still more than 3 percentage points lower
than before the pandemic, with only modest improvement since late last year.
Yet since the Fed's last forecasts in March, overall economic growth may have
accelerated, and some policymakers estimate it is already back to its
pre-pandemic level. Fed Vice Chair Richard Clarida said recently that gross
domestic product growth could top 7% this year - a figure consistent with the
6.9% median view of private forecasts in a recent Reuters poll.
(Graphic: Fed vs. private 2021 GDP outlook -
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-FED/OUTLOOK/
rlgpdbnxzpo/chart.png)
A boost in the Fed's GDP outlook would likely mean an improved year-end
unemployment projection as well. Accompanied with higher inflation, that could
begin to shift the thinking of the central bank in how to manage its flexible 2%
inflation target.
Median expectations among consumers for what inflation will look like over the
next year rose for a seventh consecutive month to 4% in May, up from 3.4% in
April, according to a monthly survey released by the New York Fed on Monday.
Some policymakers have already signaled they feel the monthly bond-buying
program has outlived its usefulness and should be reduced soon. And it would
only require two Fed officials to change their views about the timing of a first
rate hike to begin to shift "liftoff" into 2023.
"For the first time in a while, we are cautious heading into the June Fed
meeting this week," given the possibility of the central bank sounding more
strident about inflation and more doubtful about the timetable for tightening
policy, ISI Evercore Vice Chairman Krishna Guha wrote this week. "The challenge
for the Fed is to show it is implementing" its new, job-focused framework, "not
changing it ... To the extent there is any information at all in (recent
economic) data, it has gone in the direction of a near-term conflict between the
Fed's employment and inflation goals."
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Paul Simao)
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