The Philippine Star

Fed flags risk US inflation could become entrenched

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WASHINGTON (AFP) – US central bankers last month flagged the concern that skyhigh inflation could become a permanent fixture, and stressed their readiness to continue raising interest rates to tamp down price pressures, according to the minutes of the latest policy meeting released Wednesday.

The Federal Reserve last month implemente­d the most aggressive interest rate increase in nearly 30 years, as policymake­rs cited worries that price pressures had shown no signs of easing, according to the record of the June 14-15 meeting.

The members of the Fed’s policy-setting Federal Open Market Committee raised the benchmark borrowing rate three-quarters of a point and at the time said another similar increase was possible later this month, after data showing consumer prices surged 8.6 percent in the 12 months to May – the highest in more than four decades.

Officials were concerned “that inflation pressures had yet to show signs of abating,” further evidence “inflation would be more persistent than they had previously anticipate­d,” the minutes said.

Many policymake­rs said there was “a significan­t risk... that elevated inflation could become entrenched if the public began to question the resolve of the committee.”

But the minutes made clear the officials don’t plan to let up in their efforts to cool the economy, at least through the end of the year.

With the high prices for food, energy, housing and other goods squeezing American families, Fed officials stressed the moves were “essential in restoring price stability.”

Still, there remains a risk inflation will continue to accelerate amid the uncertaint­y surroundin­g how long the Russian invasion of Ukraine and COVID-19 lockdowns in China will continue to exacerbate price pressures, the report said.

Officials acknowledg­ed they might have to be even more aggressive in tightening monetary policy “if elevated inflation pressures were to persist.”

However, economists note that more recent data and surveys show price pressures easing and housing demand slowing, while even job openings in the red-hot US labor market dipped.

“Not sure people realize how dramatical­ly the runaway inflation narrative has now collapsed,” Nobel-prize winning economist and columnist Paul Krugman said on Twitter.

He said retail gasoline prices have not reflected the cooling at the wholesale level.

Oil prices have retreated for the past two days, with the US benchmark WTI below $100 for the first time in about two months.

But, he tweeted, “a lot of economic commentato­rs have been waiting years for the chance to posture sternly against runaway inflation, and really, really won’t want to back down.”

Ian Shepherdso­n of Pantheon Macroecono­mics also noted that while the minutes point to an economy still expanding, that “growth picture is way out of date” as recent figures show second-quarter GDP likely fell again.

The Fed’s super-sized rate hike last month came with the central bank under intense pressure to curb soaring prices that have left millions of Americans struggling to make ends meet and sent President Joe Biden’s approval ratings plunging.

Following the meeting, Fed Chair Jerome Powell said it was “essential” to lower inflation, but stressed that the goal is to achieve that without derailing the US economy.

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