Fed's Cook says geopolitical tensions could change US economic outlook
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[November 08, 2023] By
Padraic Halpin and Conor Humphries
DUBLIN (Reuters) -A rise in geopolitical tensions across the world could
aggravate already subdued growth in Europe and China and the spillover
may alter the path of the U.S. economy, Federal Reserve Governor Lisa
Cook said on Wednesday.
"Clearly what happens to the rest of the world affects the U.S. and
right now economic growth is pretty subdued among our major trading
partners," Cook said during a panel discussion at a conference hosted by
the Central Bank of Ireland in Dublin.
"We are not only watching subdued growth, we're watching the
geopolitical tensions that we're all talking about, and that could
change the outlook both in the United States and the global economy."
Cook added that geopolitical tensions may in particular destabilize
commodity markets and access to credit in the current higher interest
rate environment.
"Any shock could make the situation worse that we're already (in)... and
could be destabilizing to commodity markets, could be destabilizing to
the system of credit," Cook said. "We are watching and waiting. We're
being vigilant."
Cook's comments followed a speech in which she outlined in more detail a
number of international risks, including conflict in Ukraine and the
Middle East, as well as persistent inflationary pressures abroad and a
further economic slowdown in China, that she said could threaten global
financial stability.
She did not detail her view of the U.S. economic outlook or comment on
the Fed's policy interest rate, nor did she give a sense of how likely
she felt any of those potential risks were to becoming reality.
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Dr. Lisa DeNell Cook, of Michigan, nominated to be a Member of the
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, speaks before a
Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee confirmation
hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., U.S., February 3, 2022.
REUTERS/Ken Cedeno/Pool/File Photo
Much of her speech was a repeat of one on Monday, in which she
described a largely resilient financial sector that is in better
shape than it was in the mid-2000s, though subject to some risks
including from non-bank financial institutions and from a decline in
commercial real estate values, and a largely strong household
sector, though with some stresses building among those with lower
credit scores.
But in an added section Cook newly delineated several risks from
abroad, including the potential for unexpected policy rate increases
if inflationary pressures persist, international spillovers should
China's economic slowdown worsen, and the potential for rising
tensions in Russia, the Middle East and China to generate risks to
global markets.
"More broadly, escalation of geopolitical tensions could lead to
lower economic activity and increased fragmentation of global trade
flows and financial intermediation, raising financing and production
costs and contributing to more sustained supply chain challenges and
inflationary pressures," Cook said.
(Reporting by Padraic Halpin and Conor Humphries in Dublin, Ann
Saphir in San Francisco; writing by Lindsay Dunsmuir; Editing by
Leslie Adler and Mark Potter)
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