Fed's united front on interest rates may soon be tested
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[July 25, 2022] By
Howard Schneider and Ann Saphir
WASHINGTON/SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) -
Federal Reserve officials are likely to hit a key milestone this week
with an interest rate hike that effectively ends pandemic-era support
for the U.S. economy and begins to test whether growth can continue
without the central bank's active help.
The Fed is expected to raise its benchmark overnight interest rate by
three-quarters of a percentage point to a target range of 2.25% to 2.50%
at the end of a two-day policy meeting on Wednesday. That would match
the high hit before the COVID-19 pandemic and lift rates to a level
officials see as roughly "neutral," or no longer supporting the economy,
over the long run.
With that benchmark in view, the debate shifts to questions that will
determine whether the economy can avoid a recession in coming months:
How low will inflation need to fall before Fed officials conclude it is
under control? How high will rates need to rise for that to happen? And
how much of a cost will be paid in terms of slower economic growth and
rising joblessness?
Fed officials coalesced behind aggressive rate hikes as they watched
inflation accelerate this year. But there is little precedent for the
moment they now face, and little clarity on how monetary policy will be
set once inflation begins to ease and as they begin to interpret the
outlook differently.
"As long as inflation is as high as it is, and no sign of abating, you
are going to have a united front," said Luke Tilley, chief economist at
Wilmington Trust. The Fed's preferred inflation measure is running at a
four-decade high of more than 6%, roughly triple the formal 2% target.
But even with officials promising a full-tilt battle against
destabilizing price increases, it may take as little as two months of
slowing inflation for "the hawks and the doves ... to make themselves
known pretty quickly," with renewed debate over how much risk it is
reasonable to take with the economy to drive inflation down another
notch, he said.
Hawks and doves is central-bank shorthand for the tension between
policymakers more concerned about the risks of inflation - hawks - and
those who prioritize the Fed's other goal of maximum employment - doves.
That has become a hard distinction to draw when all policymakers say
they are prepared to raise rates as high as necessary
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-ECONOMY/FED/lgpdwawwzvo/
index.html to cool inflation.
'NO REAL DISPUTE'
So far, there's been no real decision to make except how large a rate
increase to approve at each policy meeting.
Inflation has actually accelerated since the Fed began raising rates in
March, prompting officials to shift from the quarter-percentage-point
increase that month to a half-percentage-point hike in May and to a
75-basis-point increase in June. That's a trajectory not seen since
former Fed Chair Paul Volcker's battle with inflation in the 1980s.
At a news conference on Wednesday, Fed Chair Jerome Powell may start to
shape expectations for the next policy meeting in September, but be
reluctant to speak much beyond that.
The U.S. unemployment rate, meanwhile, has remained at a low 3.6% since
March, with more than 350,000 jobs being added monthly and leaving
little sense yet that policymakers have reached a point where their
efforts to control inflation require a direct tradeoff in terms of jobs.
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The Federal Reserve building is pictured in Washington, D.C., U.S.,
August 22, 2018. REUTERS/Chris Wattie/File Photo
Rate increases are intended to ease inflation by slowing the economy overall.
That can also lead to rising unemployment and even an outright recession.
At the Fed's June 14-15 meeting, even the least aggressive policymaker projected
a federal funds rate above 3% by the end of this year, which would be the
highest since the 2007-2009 financial crisis ushered in an era of low interest
rates and benign inflation.
The current pace of job creation is "way too high. That's why there is no real
dispute within the (Federal Open Market) Committee," said Ethan Harris, the head
of global research at Bank of America, referring to the Fed's policy-setting
body.
Similarly, the current unemployment rate isn't considered consistent with 2%
inflation and "they need to see some evidence it is picking up" to gain
confidence that inflation will move persistently lower, Harris added.
BECOMING RESTRICTIVE
A key unknown is how policymakers will react once inflation and unemployment
start to change meaningfully.
The 75-basis-point rate hike expected this week marks one of the fastest-ever
turns from a low point in rates back to neutral, a level policymakers are eager
to reach sooner than later in order to stop stimulating the economy.
Each move from here goes deeper into what's considered "restrictive" territory.
While financial markets have priced in higher rates - exemplified by rises in
the cost of a 30-year fixed mortgage - they also see an increased risk of
recession and, as a result, potential Fed rate cuts as soon as next year.
U.S. central bank officials will likely stick with their data-dependent mantra.
But the same data can mean different things to different policymakers and are
usually evaluated with an eye towards how risks to their goals are shifting.
Some may insist on a strict return to 2% inflation regardless of the economic
losses needed to get there; others have suggested that data moving convincingly
in the right direction might be enough.
There are signs consumers already are pulling back - or being forced to - by
prices that are rising faster than wages. Retail sales growth on an
inflation-adjusted basis has slowed to a crawl. And, in a sign of household
stress, AT&T said its overall cash flow has suffered because so many of its
customers are late with monthly bill payments.
The federal funds rate was last in the 2.25%-2.50% range in late 2018 after a
string of rate hikes. Signs of economic weakness, however, caused the Fed to
halt any further tightening and within roughly eight months it was cutting
rates.
Inflation was tame at that point, so the focus was on maintaining a labor market
that had a similar unemployment rate to now and was producing solid gains for
lower-income and less-skilled workers.
As Fed policymakers probe how the economy responds to even higher borrowing
costs, they may well be faced with a tougher set of choices this time.
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Dan Burns and Paul Simao)
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