Fed doves look to midsummer for clarity on economy
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[November 10, 2021] (Reuters)
-Two of the U.S. central bank's most dovish
policymakers said Tuesday they expect to get more clarity on the
post-pandemic economic outlook by next summer, when the Federal Reserve
is expected to finish winding down its asset purchases.
Whether that clarity leaves them convinced interest rates should stay at
their current near-zero level for another year or more, or moves them to
join the half of their fellow Fed policymakers who support more
immediate rate hikes, will depend on two main factors, their remarks
suggested: if inflation has begun to abate as they expect, and if
workers are flooding back into the labor force as they have long hoped.
Minneapolis Federal Reserve Bank President Neel Kashkari, who in
September was the Fed's only policymaker to call for leaving rates at
their current near-zero level until 2024, said Tuesday he is keeping an
"open mind" on monetary policy.
With the latest COVID-19 surge fading in the United States but still
disrupting economies globally, "we are getting these mixed signals out
of the economy," Kashkari said at an event at University of
Wisconsin-Eau Claire.
Wages are rising, for instance, but the U.S. economy is supporting an
estimated 5 million to 7 million fewer jobs than would have been
expected had there been no COVID-19 crisis, and the percentage of the
population who are working or want to work has stalled at 61.6%, well
below pre-pandemic levels, data shows.
Inflation is well above the Fed's 2% target, driven by factors that
ought to be temporary -- supply-chain disruptions as well as a surge in
demand as the economy reopens -- but are proving to be longer lasting
than earlier thought, Kashkari said.
"I'm optimistic, in the next three, six, nine months we will get a lot
more information" and clarity about whether the millions who left the
workforce during the pandemic will return, he said. If they don't,
"that's going to give me more concern that the high inflation readings
that we've been seeing may be sustained."
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Mary Daly, President of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco,
poses after giving a speech on the U.S. economic outlook, in Idaho
Falls, Idaho, U.S., November 12 2018. REUTERS/Ann Saphir./File Photo
Earlier Tuesday, San Francisco Federal Reserve Bank President Mary Daly also set
her clock to mid-2022, telling a National Association of Business Economists
virtual meeting, "let's be patient" on policy and wait to see whether inflation
fades when the pandemic does, as she expects.
Raising interest rates too soon, she said, will do very little to reduce prices
but will "absolutely" reduce the pace of job gains.
"That's too much risk to take when we don't have any indication that these are
today persistent trends," she said.
"I'm looking at the summer of 2022 is when we should - knock on wood, no more
variants, no more Delta surges - get some clarity" on whether inflation will
persist post-pandemic and if the labor supply is truly tight, as many employers
say it is, or if higher wages and an improving public health environment bring
more people back to the job market.
In the meantime it could be a "challenging time" as consumers have to pay more
for gasoline and food and other necessities, she said.
On Monday, Chicago Fed President Charles Evans, who also leans dovish, said he
too thinks inflation is being driven mostly by COVID-19-related supply shortages
that will fade. But he said he's less sure than he had been three or four months
ago, and appeared to set a more rapid timetable for proving his expectations
out.
"By the spring we are going to know a lot more about this, and if I'm still kind
of making the same excuses, boy they better be really good excuses because it's
just not going to sound quite right," he told reporters.
(Reporting by Ann Saphir; Editing by Jonathan Oatis)
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