How "substantial" was progress for the Fed?
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[November 03, 2021] By
Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Last December, with
COVID-19 vaccinations only just beginning and the pandemic still raging,
the U.S. Federal Reserve promised it would continue supporting the
recovery with $120 billion in monthly bond purchases until there had
been "substantial further progress" in meeting it goals of 2% inflation
and maximum employment.
At the end of its November policy meeting on Wednesday the central bank
is likely to declare that standard met, clearing the way to trim $120
billion in monthly bond buying and eventually raise interest rates.
How substantial has the progress been?
In the case of inflation, probably more than the Fed bargained for. The
annual rate of price increases was 1.3%, measured by the Fed's preferred
Personal Consumption Expenditures price index, at the time the
"substantial further progress" benchmark was set. It has been more than
4% since May.
(GRAPHIC: Inflation jumps - https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-FED/JOBS/gkplgxreevb/chart.png)
The job market has been more of a mixed picture.
Employment has been slower to rebound, for example, than the overall
level of economic output. Gross domestic product is now above where it
was pre-pandemic, while jobs remain more than 3% below that level.
(GRAPHIC: Jobs lagging GDP Jobs lagging GDP -
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-FED/JOBGROWTH/
xegpbzzrbpq/chart.png)
In one sense that's a promising development because it means higher
worker productivity - fewer people producing an increased amount of
goods and services.
But it also reflects a potential scar to the degree people who want to
work aren't getting hired, or, given the Fed's new commitment to an
inclusive recovery, to the degree job growth is not broadly shared.
That's where the story gets tricky, and makes a Fed declaration of
substantial further progress very much a judgment call.
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The Federal Reserve building is set against a blue sky in
Washington, U.S., May 1, 2020. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File Photo
When the Fed put the benchmark in place, the economy was about 10
million jobs short of where it was in February, 2020, before the first
wave of pandemic layoffs. About half of those jobs have been regained.
(GRAPHIC: Substantial progress on jobs - https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-FED/JOBS/mopankjnlva/chart.png)
Though 5 million missing jobs is a lot, Fed officials are banking that
the record number of openings in the economy means the shortfall relates
more to workers becoming choosier about the positions they will accept,
an issue Fed policy can't really address, rather than inadequate demand
for labor, a problem it could confront. Dialing back the bond buying is
the Fed's way of saying that demand - for goods, services and workers -
is strong enough now without that additional bit of help.
But it is also a narrower view of the job market than the Fed seemed to
adopt last year when it began referring to maximum employment as a
"broad-based and inclusive goal."
A range of metrics - the unemployment rate for Blacks, the labor force
participation rate for women, the share of the population overall that
is working - remain significantly worse than before the pandemic.
(GRAPHIC: "Substantial further progress" for the Fed? -
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-ECONOMY/FEDPROGRESS/
yzdvxmmmdpx/
chart.png)
In a broad sense progress may have been substantial over the last year.
The Fed now turns to debating how much more progress is needed to meet
its goals, on jobs in particular, and how much is possible while keeping
inflation under control.
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Dan Burns and Andrea Ricci)
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