Powell's Fed not shy about election-year cuts, ready to defend job
market
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[August 24, 2024] By
Howard Schneider
JACKSON HOLE, Wyoming (Reuters) - Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell
made it clear on Friday the U.S. central bank would not shy away from
pivoting to interest rate cuts in the final weeks of a presidential
election campaign and that protecting the job market was now its top
priority.
"The time has come for policy to adjust," Powell said in a speech to the
Kansas City Fed's annual Jackson Hole conference in a strong signal the
central bank will start cutting rates in mid-September, roughly seven
weeks before the Nov. 5 election.
His remarks - essentially a declaration that the Fed's fight with
inflation was over and safeguarding employment was now at the top of its
to-do list - came the morning after Vice President Kamala Harris
accepted the Democratic nomination for president, a development that has
disrupted a contest that had been leaning toward former President Donald
Trump, the Republican candidate.
The remarks tee up a first rate cut at the Fed's Sept. 17-18 meeting, a
move that Trump, who was highly critical of Powell despite having picked
him for the top Fed job, and some Republican lawmakers have warned would
be seen as a partisan effort to juice the economy ahead of the voting.
Powell and his fellow policymakers, including others appointed by Trump,
such as Fed Governor Christopher Waller, have moved steadily in the last
four weeks toward a consensus rate cut at next month's meeting, citing
economic data that has increasingly shown inflation on the wane as risks
to the labor market have increased.
This won't be the first time the Fed has begun a rate-cutting cycle in
an election year, and prior election-year policy turns have coincided
with both wins and losses for incumbents and challengers. But a rate cut
on Sept. 18 would be - at roughly seven weeks - the second-closest a
policy turn has occurred before a presidential vote since at least 1976.
Back then, the Fed's chief, Arthur Burns, embarked on a short easing
cycle beginning just four weeks ahead of an election featuring a race
between Republican President Gerald Ford and Democratic challenger Jimmy
Carter. Ford lost.
'DO EVERYTHING WE CAN'
Congress has charged the Fed with maintaining the highest level of
employment consistent with stable inflation, and with the unemployment
rate having risen nearly a percentage point - from 3.4% to 4.3% - over
the past year, Powell said the Fed had seen enough.
"We do not seek or welcome further cooling in labor market conditions,"
Powell said in his speech at a lodge in Wyoming's Grand Teton National
Park, answering a question that until now remained open: How much more
job weakness would the Fed tolerate or feel it required to wring the
last bit of inflation from the economy? The answer is none, with the
inflation measure the Fed uses for its 2% target now currently at 2.5%
and seemingly on the way lower.
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Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell delivers remarks during a press
conference in Washington, U.S., June 12, 2024. REUTERS/Evelyn
Hockstein/File Photo
With price pressures easing and many hiring measures starting to
weaken, Powell said the central bank would now "do everything we can
to support a strong labor market," a comment some analysts said
opened the door to an initial cut of half a percentage point as
opposed to the more traditional quarter-percentage-point increments.
It was a significant shift in tone from Powell's comments as
inflation surged in 2021 and 2022. The Fed began raising its
benchmark policy rate in March 2022 to what would be the highest
level in a quarter of a century, and at the Jackson Hole forum two
years ago he warned that workers and families would feel "pain" in
the form of rising joblessness and higher credit costs.
Credit certainly became more expensive. The average interest rate on
a 30-year fixed-rate home loan rose from less than 3% in the summer
of 2021, before the rate hikes began, to nearly 8% last October
after the Fed's policy rate reached its plateau in the 5.25%-5.50%
range in July 2023.
But the labor market pain never really materialized. The
unemployment rate, which has averaged 5.7% since the late 1940s,
remained below 4% from February 2022 - on the eve of the Fed rate
hikes - until this past May. Wages continued to rise.
Even the current 4.3% level is about what the central bank feels is
consistent with the Fed's 2% inflation target over the long run.
But it is higher than what Powell inherited when he became Fed chief
in 2018, conditions he said he wanted to restore when the COVID-19
pandemic threw more than 20 million people out of work in the spring
of 2020 and pushed the unemployment rate as high as 14.8%.
A significant rise from the current level of unemployment could
weaken Powell's legacy as a Fed chief who reoriented monetary policy
to put more weight on the central bank's employment mandate in the
belief that low jobless rates and stable inflation could coexist.
He says he remains optimistic.
"With an appropriate dialing back of policy restraint, there is good
reason to think that the economy will get back to 2% inflation while
maintaining a strong labor market," Powell said. With the Fed's
benchmark rate posing a headwind to the economy, and arguably far
above the "neutral rate" that neither restrains nor stimulates
economic growth - and even farther from the near-zero "liftoff"
level in 2022 - "the current level of our policy rate gives us ample
room to respond," he said.
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Dan Burns and Paul Simao)
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