Powell: "Tension" between jobs, inflation is the chief
challenge facing Fed
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[September 30, 2021] (Reuters)
-Resolving "tension" between high inflation
and still-elevated unemployment is the most urgent issue facing the
Federal Reserve right now, Fed Chair Jerome Powell said Wednesday,
acknowledging the central bank's two goals are in potential conflict.
"This is not the situation that we have faced for a very long time and
it is one in which there is a tension between our two
objectives...Inflation is high and well above target and yet there
appears to be slack in the labor market," Powell said at a European
Central Bank forum, an apparent reference to the 1970s bout of U.S.
"stagflation" that combined high unemployment and fast-rising prices.
The United States is more than 5 million jobs short of where it was
before the pandemic. At the Fed's most recent meeting policymakers
lifted their inflation forecasts for this year to 4.2% - more than twice
the targeted level of 2%. They see that pace easing in 2022 to 2.2%,
modestly above where they had pegged it in their previous projections in
June.
Powell said the Fed's working "hypothesis" is that inflation will
largely ease on its own as the global economy returns to normal after a
rocky reopening from the pandemic, a baseline that lets the Fed chief
refer to interest rate increases as still "a ways off."
But asked about his biggest concerns right now, Powell referred to the
possible clash between the Fed's two goals of stable prices and full
employment, a situation that could force the Fed to make trade-offs
between the two by raising interest rates to tame prices at a time when
it still wants to encourage job growth.
"Managing through that over the next couple of years is the highest and
most important priority and it is going to be very challenging," Powell
said at a virtual event alongside the heads of the ECB, Bank of Japan
and Bank of England.
MANAGING TRADE-OFFS
His comments are among the most direct the Fed chief has made on a topic
policymakers have tried to downplay: That current high inflation, if it
persists, could force them to begin to tighten monetary policy before
they deliver on a promise to reach "maximum employment" and fully heal
the job market of its pandemic scars.
Typically the rates of unemployment and inflation are inversely related,
partly due to monetary policy and the use of interest rates to either
stimulate or depress the demand for goods and services, thus influencing
prices and hiring.
[to top of second column] |
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell testifies during a Senate
Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee hearing on the CARES
Act, at the Hart Senate Office Building in Washington, DC, U.S.,
September 28, 2021. Kevin Dietsch/Pool via REUTERS
That relationship seemed to weaken in recent years, with low inflation existing
side by side in the United States with very tight labor markets and low
unemployment.
But the global supply shocks delivered by the pandemic has at least temporarily
brought back the old dynamics, pushing the availability of goods and services
out of kilter with the demand for them.
The issue now is how long that dislocation lasts, and whether inflation proves
so persistent that it outruns improvement in the job market and forces the Fed
to begin raising interest rates while unemployment is still high.
The risks around inflation have already prompted half of Fed officials to pencil
in interest rate increases beginning next year, and while the job market may
make marked progress by then Powell in his remarks said the difficulties around
the world's economic reopening had become "frustrating."
"It is frustrating to acknowledge that getting people vaccinated and getting
Delta under control 18 months later still remains the most important economic
policy that we have," Powell said in response to a question on the U.S. economic
outlook. "And it's also frustrating to see the bottlenecks and supply chain
problems not getting better, in fact at the margin apparently getting a little
bit worse."
"We see that continuing into next year probably and holding inflation up longer
than we had thought," Powell said. "But ultimately the outlook for next year
among my colleagues and me at the Fed for next year is quite a strong year with
growth quite above trend and unemployment reaching significantly lower levels
than now."
Fed officials at their meeting earlier this month downgraded their views of U.S.
gross domestic product growth for this year but upgraded estimates for next
year, reflecting expectations that activity for the balance of this year will be
stymied by supply issues and those restraints will fade in 2022.
(Reporting By Dan Burns and Howard Schneider; Editing by Andrea Ricci)
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