Fed's Powell, on eve of next rate hike, urged to protect jobs
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[October 26, 2022] (Reuters)
- U.S. Senate Banking Committee Chair
Sherrod Brown on Tuesday urged Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell to be
careful about tightening monetary policy so much that millions of
Americans already suffering from high inflation also lose their jobs.
"It is your job to combat inflation, but at the same time, you must not
lose sight of your responsibility to ensure that we have full
employment," Brown said in the letter, also addressed to the Fed's Board
of Governors and released publicly by Brown's office. "We must avoid
having our short-term advances and strong labor market overwhelmed by
the consequences of aggressive monetary actions to decrease inflation,
especially when the Fed’s actions do not address its main drivers."
Fed policymakers are widely expected to deliver a fourth straight
supersized interest-rate hike when they meet next week, bringing the
policy rate to 3.75%-4% as part of what has been the sharpest set of
rate increases in about 40 years.
Brown's letter did not explicitly ask Powell or the Fed to slow or stop
rate hikes, though it did urge "continued caution" in light of the
synchronized monetary policy tightening by central banks around the
world and Russia's war in Ukraine among other factors posing the "real
possibility of worsening the global economic situation."
Powell for his part has nodded to those risks and to the likelihood that
raising borrowing costs will lead to a rise in unemployment, now at a
historically low 3.5%.
But he has also argued that beating inflation - running at more than
three times the Fed's 2% target - is the only way to ensure long-term
labor market strength.
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Federal Reserve Board Chairman Jerome
Powell hosts an event on "Fed Listens: Transitioning to the
Post-pandemic Economy" at the Federal Reserve in Washington, U.S.,
September 23, 2022. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
Brown's letter to Powell comes as his fellow Democrats across the
country battle to maintain their razor-thin majority in the Senate,
with a particularly closely watched race in Ohio, Brown's home
state. The elections take place a week after the Fed's meeting.
Republicans blame Democrats' pandemic aid and other policies for
high inflation and say they will do a better job with the economy;
Democrats have blamed rising prices on greedy corporations and
supply chains.
Fed policymakers say the research shows inflation is being driven
both by sky-high demand and supply constraints, and that regardless
of the cause, they are committed to doing what they can to bring it
down.
Brown's letter is unlikely to sway them from that view, though they
are expected to at least begin talking about slowing rate hikes when
they gather Nov. 1-2.
Still, Brown's missive underscores the political backdrop against
which the Fed operates, much as policymakers try to stay out of
politics and say their very effectiveness depends on political
independence.
"I ask that you don’t forget your responsibility to promote maximum
employment and that the decisions you make at the next FOMC meeting
reflect your commitment to the dual mandate," Brown wrote.
(Reporting by Ann Saphir; Editing by Aurora Ellis)
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