Fed's Waller: 'More aggressive' response may be needed
if inflation stays high
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[October 20, 2021] By
Howard Schneider and Ann Saphir
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -If inflation keeps
rising at its current pace in coming months rather than subsiding as
expected, Federal Reserve policymakers may need to adopt "a more
aggressive policy response" next year, Fed Governor Christopher Waller
said on Tuesday.
For now, Waller said in remarks to the Stanford Institute for Economic
Policy Research, he continues to believes the economy has seen the worst
of the most recent coronavirus wave, that labor and other supply
shortages will ease over time and that "the escalation of inflation will
be transitory," with price increases moving back to the Fed's 2% goal
next year.
That would mean any increase to the Fed's key policy interest rate from
its current near-zero level "is still some time off," he said, a view in
synch with most of his colleagues.
The Fed's most recent "dot plot" depicting policymakers' rate-hike
expectations show about half seeing the Fed lifting rates by the end of
next year, with the other half expecting liftoff by the end of 2023.
A longer wait on raising rates could give the economy more time to
achieve full employment, the other leg of the Fed's dual mandate.

But Waller said he feels the risks are shifting, and he is now "greatly
concerned" the current fast rise in prices may continue.
"If monthly prints of inflation continue to run high through the
remainder of this year, a more aggressive policy response than just
tapering may well be warranted in 2022," Waller said.
The consumer price index has risen at a more than 5% annual rate for
four months in a row, a run not seen since 1990.
"If inflation were to continue at 5% into 2022, you'll start seeing
everybody potentially - well, I can't speak for anybody else, just
myself, but - you would see people pulling their 'dots' forward and
having potentially more than one hike in 2022," he said.
"We can worry about the employment leg, but if inflation expectations
come unanchored, we've got to put that aside and get those expectations
reanchored - everything hinges on that," he said. "The minute we start
seeing anything that looks like unanchoring, you are going to see some
action to get those things back in place."
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An eagle tops the U.S.
Federal Reserve building's facade in Washington, July 31, 2013.
REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst/File Photo

TAPERING?
To make room for such action, if needed, Waller has been pushing for the Fed to
start trimming its $120 billion in monthly asset purchases.
On Tuesday, he said the economy was ready for such a move, calling for it to
begin next month and to be completed by the middle of next year.
In particular, he said, the "mind-boggling" reduction in unemployment to the
current 4.8% from a 14.8% pandemic high shows the labor market is getting close
to its pre-pandemic strength, particularly after accounting for an estimated 2
million people who retired during the crisis and, he said, are not likely to
come back.
Most Fed policymakers agree with Waller that it will soon be time to taper, and
they are widely expected to announce a decision to do so when they meet in early
November.
It is not clear how widely shared is Waller's view that the labor market is
close to its pre-pandemic strength.
Some, including Richmond Fed President Thomas Barkin, say they are open to the
possibility that as wages rise, more workers may come in from the sidelines,
allowing the economy to support more jobs and, at the same time, relieving some
upward pressure on inflation.
Waller sounded more cautious, noting that firms have more pricing power now than
in many years, and that consumers seem to be accepting higher prices.
He cautioned against assuming that outsized and likely onetime increases in
things like used auto prices mean high inflation is only temporary. If large
"onetime" price increases rotate among enough goods, it could push overall
inflation higher than desired.
"One should exhibit caution in dismissing data as outliers," he warned.
(Reporting by Howard Schneider and Ann Saphir; Editing by Andrea Ricci and Peter
Cooney)
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