Fed has 'a lot of time' before next rate decision needs to be made,
Barkin says
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[August 20, 2022] By
Howard Schneider
OCEAN CITY, Md. (Reuters) - U.S. central
bank officials have "a lot of time still" before they need to decide how
large an interest rate increase to approve at their Sept. 20-21 policy
meeting, Richmond Federal Reserve President Thomas Barkin said on
Friday.
With an unusually long eight-week gap between meetings, the Fed still
has "another bite" at data including jobs, inflation and other reports
that will shape whether it opts for a half-percentage-point increase in
its benchmark overnight interest rate or a third consecutive
75-basis-point hike, Barkin told reporters on the sidelines of a
Maryland Association of Counties conference in Ocean City, Md.
Given the strength of inflation this year, with consumer prices
increasing 8.5% on an annual basis in July, Barkin said the "urge" among
central bankers was towards faster, front-loaded rate increases.
Inflation, when calculated using a separate measure preferred by the Fed
is about three times the central bank's 2% target, and policymakers have
made taming the price increases their top priority.
But after one of the fastest monetary policy shifts in decades, Barkin
said the drive to raise rates also needs to be balanced with the impact
rate hikes are having on the economy, and with sensitivity to the fact
that the full brunt of those effects may be delayed.
So far, he said, the recent release of strong retail sales,
stronger-than-expected industrial production, and continued hiring shows
the U.S. economy may have gained steam since the Fed's July 26-27
meeting - rather than showed clear evidence that demand was cooling, as
its policymakers feel is needed to temper inflation.
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Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond
President Thomas Barkin poses during a break at a Dallas Fed
conference on technology in Dallas, Texas, U.S., May 23, 2019.
REUTERS/Ann Saphir/File Photo
"The underlying activity metrics ... look stronger than three weeks ago," Barkin
said.
Though recent inflation readings showed some slowing in the pace of price
increases, he attributed that to changes in prices for cars and apparel that
were "very bouncy."
"It's all a balance between how much underlying strength is there still in the
economy, and therefore pressure on prices, and how much of that pressure on
prices is easing" because of other changes in supply or commodity markets,
Barkin said.
"On the margin I tilt toward 'get there faster,'" in moving rates to the
restrictive level that will be needed to cool demand and control prices, Barkin
said. But "there's still some question in my mind about how you balance that
urge with the uncertainty about the underlying health of the economy in a world
where our moves operate with a lag."
The Fed has lifted its policy rate by 2.25 percentage points since March,
including two 75-basis-point moves in June and July. Officials are expected to
hike that rate by half a percentage point or three-quarters of a percentage
point next month.
In the interim they will receive two more inflation reports, estimates of August
payroll employment growth, and more housing and consumer spending data.
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Paul Simao)
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