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Evans: Fed should keep raising rates if inflation nears 2%

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NEW YORK: The Federal Reserve should continue gradually raising interest rates if data on consumer prices available by the central bank’s mid-June policy meeting indicate inflation will soon reach the 2% target, Chicago Fed President Charles Evans said.

“If the data themselves are at 2%, if they are more consistent with us getting to 2% very soon, then I think that continuing our slow, gradual increases will be appropriat­e,” Evans said Saturday while speaking to reporters following a talk at the University of Chicago.

“The headwinds that we were facing have turned into tailwinds, fiscal policy has been much, much more supportive of further growth, and so the need for more accommodat­ive monetary policy is less than it was before,” he said.

On Friday, Fed Chairman Jerome Powell backed further gradual interest-rate increases amid strong US economic momentum, while adding that the lack of a spike in wage growth shows the labour market is “not excessivel­y tight.”

His remarks were reinforced by comments several hours later by John Williams, who’s currently president of the San Francisco Fed and would become president of the New York Fed in June.

Powell, in his first speech since becoming Fed chairman in February, avoided discussing the turbulent US stock market and also sought to steer clear of the simmering US-China trade dispute.

Evans took a similar tack on Saturday, saying that the economy “benefits tremendous­ly from well understood, stable trading rules and environmen­ts,” but that the direct effect from tariffs as currently proposed looked “only relatively small” for the national economy.

Evans voted against the policy-setting Federal Open Market Committee’s rate hike in December, but doesn’t have a vote on the rotating panel this year.

Fed officials raised rates again at their March meeting and signaled they would probably support at least two more hikes in 2018. Inflation, measured by the central bank’s preferred gauge, rose 1.8% in the 12 months through February and has been below the Fed’s 2% target throughout most of the current economic expansion, which started in mid-2009.

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