Do blockbuster job gains jive with 'slow-flation'? Fed's Powell faces
new dilemma
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[February 07, 2023] By
Howard Schneider and Andrea Shalal
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - After vouching last week that a "gratifying" drop
in inflation was underway, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell will face
questions on Tuesday about whether a blowout January jobs report has
shaken his confidence the decline can continue without harsher steps by
the U.S. central bank to slow the economy.
Fed officials, including Powell, are typically reluctant to put weight
on single data points, and the Labor Department report on Friday showing
571,000 jobs were added in January may be seen as particularly "noisy"
given annual data revisions and seasonal adjustments. Indeed, on an
unadjusted basis, employers cut jobs last month as they do every January
but by a much smaller amount than usual, resulting in the largest
seasonally adjusted increase in six months.
But, with the unemployment rate hitting its lowest level since 1969 at
3.4%, January's numbers were still far out of line with the looser labor
market the Fed has expected and feels will be needed to ensure that wage
growth also slows and inflation continues to fall.
Investors skeptical of the Fed's interest rate hike plans have now
matched officials' own projections in seeing the benchmark overnight
interest rate increased by another half of a percentage point this year,
to a range of 5.00% to 5.25%, while some economists pushed even further
in suggesting the January jobs report showed the economy was still too
hot for the Fed's comfort and required even tighter monetary policy.
"It is increasingly difficult to make the case that the Fed has slowed
the economy substantially enough to return inflation" to the 2% target,
Citi economists wrote on Monday, seeing a "hawkish risk" in the remarks
that Powell will make to the Economic Club of Washington starting at
12:40 EST (1740 GMT).
The Fed last week increased its policy rate by a quarter of a percentage
point to the 4.50%-4.75% range, returning to a more conventional
rate-hike increment after nearly a year of
three-quarters-of-a-percentage-point and half-percentage-point hikes.
Powell said that in slowing down to quarter-percentage-point steps the
Fed was trying to "make a fine judgment" about how high rates needed to
go without stepping too far and tightening credit conditions so much
that it increases the risk of, or even causes, a jobs-destroying
recession.
He noted that a process of "disinflation" seemed to be taking hold so
far without throwing employment off course - a hoped-for outcome if it
can continue but one that might prove unsustainable if job growth
doesn't slow.
HARDER CALLS AHEAD
By the Fed's preferred measure, prices as of December were still
increasing at a 5% annual rate, but the pace has been slowing and is
expected to continue doing so. The consumer price index report for
January is due to be released next week, with economists projecting
another decline in the annual pace though perhaps a smaller one than has
been the case in recent months.
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Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell
hosts an event at the Federal Reserve in Washington, U.S., September
23, 2022. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File Photo
David Kamin, former deputy director of the Biden administration's
National Economic Council and now a law professor at New York
University, said after a wrenching move in interest rates last year
the Fed's toughest choices may lie ahead. Policymakers now must
balance what may be slowing progress towards their 2% inflation
target against risks to the economy if they move rates even higher
than expected, he added.
The full impact of the Fed's already-anticipated rate increases
still has not been felt on the economy, meaning the current strength
in the job market and elsewhere may in fact begin to wane, Kamin
said. At the same time, the easy progress in lowering inflation may
have been realized, with goods prices moderating as supply chains
improve but services inflation showing itself to be more stubborn.
"The Fed will have to figure out a path through, taking into account
on one hand that some share of the effects have not necessarily been
felt in the economy, and on the other that some of the factors that
brought inflation down may not repeat," Kamin said. "The Fed has a
series of harder calls to make."
Powell's tone on Tuesday will be telling, whether he interprets the
January numbers as evidence Fed policy is not yet "restrictive"
enough, or as a possible step towards a pre-pandemic state of
affairs he has lauded.
In 2019, the unemployment rate stood at 3.5% alongside inflation
that was around the Fed's target and modest wage growth, conditions
Powell at the start of the health crisis said he hoped the economy
could regain. Though job growth has remained remarkably strong, the
economy is by many estimates still perhaps a million or more
positions short of what would have been reached given job growth
trends before the onset of COVID-19, suggesting more room for
growth.
The issue for Powell and other Fed policymakers is whether the
economy begins to look so strong - whether in terms of job growth,
an expected rebound in manufacturing, or from financial markets that
recently have been bidding home mortgage and other key market
interest rates lower - it undermines their faith that inflation will
continue slowing.
"We should be open to the idea of an acceleration of activity in the
first half of the year," Tim Duy, chief U.S. economist at SGH Macro
Advisors, wrote. "The data overran the Fed last week, and Powell and
his colleagues are falling behind the curve again. It's time to
start looking for a higher terminal rate."
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Additional reporting by Andrea
Shalal; Editing by Dan Burns and Paul Simao)
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