Is the wild ride over? Fed faces broader debate as it tees up rate hike
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[July 17, 2023] By
Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Since the Federal Reserve decided to keep
interest rates on hold at its June 13-14 policy meeting, U.S. central
bank officials have given every indication they are ready to approve
another small rate increase when they gather again next week.
But recent data suggesting inflation has begun to slow in a faster and
more persistent way will likely intensify their debate over whether the
coming move will be the last one needed, with policymakers honing in on
the key issue of whether the economy has fully absorbed the impact of
the aggressive monetary tightening to date or is only beginning to
adjust.
In one case, more rate increases might be needed to ensure
"disinflation" continues; in the other, weakened price pressures are
already in the pipeline, and doing more could cause unnecessary damage
to the economy and the job market.
Officials' rhetoric has leaned towards further hikes beyond the July
25-26 meeting, when the Fed's policy-setting committee is expected to
raise the benchmark overnight interest rate by a quarter of a percentage
point to the 5.25%-5.50% range.
Fed Chair Jerome Powell has noted the majority view that two additional
rate increases would be needed, and Governor Christopher Waller made the
case for tighter policy in the central bank leadership's final remarks
before the blackout on public comments ahead of this month's meeting.
Last year's rate increases "should hit economic activity and inflation
much faster than is typically predicted," Waller said, and thus "we
can't expect much more slowing of demand and inflation from that
tightening." While recent inflation data was encouraging, he said, "one
data point does not make a trend."
Economists typically see the impact of monetary policy peaking at around
18 to 24 months after rate changes, but Fed officials have noted that
their use of "forward guidance" to flag the path of policy means market
rates adjusted well in advance of the rate hikes they rolled out
beginning in March of 2022.
Other Fed officials have hewed to the main strategic thrust of keeping
rate-hike options open and not giving investors room to think the
central bank is finished - undercutting the battle against inflation
with looser financial conditions as a result.
But arguably for the first time since the Fed's first
quarter-percentage-point rate hike in March 2022, the possibility that
this upcoming move will be the last one has gained traction beyond the
wishful thinking of investors and started to be supported by incoming
data.
'NEW EQUILIBRIUM'
Beyond the softened pace of consumer price increases in June, reports on
import prices and producers' input costs were both weaker than expected.
The producer price index, in particular, suggests consumer inflation
could keep slowing. The drop in import prices is important to Fed hopes
that out-and-out declines in goods prices, which soared during the
coronavirus pandemic, could offset service-sector inflation that has
typically been higher and "stickier," even before the pandemic.
So far, this has occurred without major disruption in the job market,
which sports a still-low unemployment rate of 3.6% and is spinning out
new jobs and wage growth at rates higher than before the pandemic. A
central point in the Fed debate is whether that amounts to a risk - a
reason for inflation to remain high as households spend rising incomes -
or a positive surprise that needs to be nurtured with patience about
future rate moves.
The current situation "still leaves us with the question whether
inflation can settle while consumers are still spending and the labor
market remains this robust," Richmond Fed President Thomas Barkin said
last week. The weak June inflation reading left him unconvinced it is on
a steady downward path.
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The U.S. Federal Reserve Building in
Washington, D.C. /File Photo
Yet signs of a new status quo appear to be emerging in the job
market, whether in the ongoing drop in the ratio of available
workers to open jobs, a recent rise in the prevalence of part-time
work, or in subtler signals.
While the number of food service and accommodations industry workers
remains a few percentage points below the pre-pandemic peak, for
example, the industry's contribution to real gross domestic product
has increased from that point: It is doing more with less and may
not need 2019 headcount levels.
"There are more and more hints of 'soft landing,' heading to a new
equilibrium," said Nick Bunker, research director at the Indeed
Hiring Lab, referring to a scenario in which monetary tightening
slows the economy, and inflation, without triggering a recession.
"It is trending towards a steadier but still-strong labor market"
that echoes conditions from 2019, with participation rates
recovering, a sustainable job-creation pace, and wages rising for
less-well-paid occupations.
'STRANGE BUSINESS CYCLE'
Until the Fed declares its inflation war at an end, however,
economists and market analysts say risks to a benign outcome will
remain.
Jason Furman, a Harvard University professor who was the top White
House economic adviser in the Obama administration from 2013 to
2017, still sees the underlying rate of inflation, by the Fed's
preferred measure, running around 3.5%.
"At 3.5%, July won't be the last time the Fed hikes," Furman said in
an interview. "I think we have learned almost nothing about what it
will take to get inflation from 3.5% to 2% ... My worry is that the
last leg might require additional unemployment."
Ed Al-Hussainy, senior rates analyst at Columbia Threadneedle,
meanwhile, is skeptical that the impact of rapid rate hikes has
already been absorbed.
"We have managed to generate this decline in inflation, that seems
to be becoming more persistent, without doing a lot of damage," he
said. "Why?"
Key rate benchmarks have on an inflation-adjusted basis shifted from
negative to sharply positive, and "I think we have not seen the full
effects" of that, he said. "To say we have the same economy with
real rates at negative 2% as we do at positive 2%, I don't buy it."
Fed officials have acknowledged data could be shifting in their
favor, but it will take time for policymakers to accept what they
are seeing as genuine and "lean in" to the idea that a soft landing
may be in sight, Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic said earlier
this month. Believing policy is operating with a long lag, Bostic
favors holding rates steady.
Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee, speaking to CNBC earlier this
month, said policymakers shouldn't be shy to show faith in an
economy that has consistently surprised.
"The premise is we need a recession to eliminate inflation,"
Goolsbee said. "I don't think that ... This was a very strange
business cycle."
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Dan Burns and Paul Simao)
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