The Manila Times

Fed chief: US outlook stronger since Dec

- AFP

WASHINGTON: The US economic outlook is strong and has grown more robust since December, when Congress approved massive tax cuts, Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said in his debut congressio­nal appearance Tuesday.

While his prepared testimony stuck to the policy of “further gradual increases” in the benchmark lending rate, Powell told lawmakers all the new factors will be taken into considerat­ion in deciding whether to raise rates three or four times this year.

But the Fed chief said he would not “prejudge” the outcome.

Not so for financial markets, which saw his comments as indicating four rate hikes are likely this year, rather than the three increases previously expected.

Wall Street stocks tumbled into negative territory immediatel­y after the comments, which also triggered a jump in the 10-year US Treasury yield, a proxy for interest rates, and fell further late in the session.

“My personal outlook for the economy has strengthen­ed since December,” Powell said in response to a question about the likely number of possible moves this year.

Fiscal policy is now adding fuel to the economy, he noted, amid job growth and wages showing signs of rising at long last.

But in semi-annual testimony to the House Financial Services - man, he noted that members of the central bank’s policy-setting Federal Open Market Committee will be updating their projection­s on the economy and the course of policy.

“I wouldn’t want to prejudge that new set of projection­s, but we’ll be taking into account everything that’s happened since December,” he said.

The Dow Jones Industrial Aver 25,410.03.

The broad- based S& P 500 dropped 1.3 percent to end the day at 2,744.28, while the techrich Nasdaq Composite Index lost 1.2 percent to 7,330.35.

“We still have that same haze of concerns about rising inter Hogan, chief market strategist at Wunderlich Securities. “Those boogeymen are still with us today.”

Inflation, wages to rise

Economists already had viewed a rate increase at the late March FOMC meeting as a virtual certainty. That outlook will only be

The Fed can at any time change the key interest rate that sets everything from mortgages to car loans, at any time, but in practice in recent years it has only done so at one of the four meetings that includes a press conference by the Fed chief, like the one in March.

Powell was very bullish on the economic outlook, noting that “some of the headwinds the US economy faced in previous years have turned into tailwinds.”

In particular, he said that in the wake of the tax cuts Congress passed in December, “fiscal policy has become more stimulativ­e,” while given the “solid economic growth of our trading partners,” which is helping the manufactur­ing sector.

However, in his responses, where he faced many questions rising federal debt in the wake of the tax cuts, Powell stressed: “We really need to get on sustainabl­e is now.”

- down by temporary factors that are unlikely to be repeated, allowing prices to rise this year closer to the two percent goal, as wage gains also accelerate at long last.

“In this environmen­t, we antici basis will move up this year,” reach- ing the two percent goal in the medium term, he said. “Wages should increase at a faster pace as well.”

The central bank’s preferred percent last year.

Weak productivi­ty

Powell also faced multiple questions about weak wage growth in recent decades, and he told lawmakers that the antidote to that is rising productivi­ty, which - ence directly.

“Productivi­ty is the thing that allows wages to rise,” he said, and the most important thing the government can do is improve education and training.

“We want this to be a society where everyone has opportunit­ies.”

He pointed to some good news in the economic data, where “upbeat business sentiment” and strong sales should boost investment, leading in turn to higher productivi­ty.

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