United States: The fight against inflation will “pain” warns the boss of the Fed

PostedAugust 26, 2022, 5:19 PM

United StatesThe fight once morest inflation will “pain” warns the boss of the Fed

The President of the American Central Bank, Jerome Powell, promised that he would use his tools “vigorously” by raising interest rates.

In this file photo taken July 27, 2022, Federal Reserve Board Chairman Jerome Powell speaks during a news conference in Washington, DC.

AFP

The fight once morest inflation in the United States “will hurt American households and businesses” but giving it up would be even more damaging for the economy, warned Friday the head of the Central Bank (Fed) Jerome Powell. In a resolute and remarkably candid statement to the central bankers’ conference in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, the Fed chairman warned that the U.S. central bank would use its tools “vigorously” in raising interest rates. interest.

Patience requested

Returning to price stability “will take time” and will lead to “a long period of weaker growth” as well as “a slowdown in the labor market”, he hammered home in an exceptionally short but determined speech, a few month of the midterm elections for the Democratic administration of Joe Biden.

Inflation in the United States prances to 8.5% in July year on year, once morest 9.1% in June, a high in 40 years, according to the consumer price index CPI. According to another indicator closely observed by the Fed, the PCE index, published on Friday, it stood at 6.3%, once morest 6.8% over one year. “While these recent declines in July are welcome, an improvement over just one month is far from sufficient” and will need to be confirmed, Mr Powell said.

Drastic measures

The Central Bank wants to bring price inflation back to around 2%, and this policy will have “a series of ‘regrettable costs,'” Mr Powel said. He reiterated that the Fed was ready for “another exceptionally strong rate hike” at the next meeting of the Monetary Committee on September 21, following already two consecutive tightenings of 75 basis points (0.75%).

The central banker warned the markets that interest rates would go into “restrictive” territory and that the neutral rate bar which reflects the ideal level of rates, generally assessed around 2.5%, to create neither overheating nor cooling the economy, was hardly topical for the moment. “Estimates of the long-term neutral rate are not a threshold where one should take a break,” he warned.

The Volcker model

Mr Powell admitted that “at some stage it will be appropriate to slow down the pace of rate hikes” but he added a caveat to this notion already reported, which had delighted financial markets recently. “History shows that we must be careful not to relax monetary policy too soon,” he warned, in this message that he wanted “direct”.

Mr Powell acknowledged that “the current inflation was a global phenomenon and that many economies around the world were facing price increases equal to or even greater than that of the United States”. To cool overheated prices, since last spring the Federal Reserve has pushed overnight rates, which influence all other credit, from zero to a range between 2.25% and 2.50%.

Several times in his speech, Mr Powell quoted an illustrious predecessor as head of the Central Bank, Paul Volcker, credited with having with an iron fist tamed runaway inflation in the early 1980s.

(AFP)

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