Cape Times

First time US policy focuses on risks to global growth

- Craig Torres

FOR THE FIRST time since the Asian and Russian crises rocked world financial markets in the late 1990s, US monetary policy is as focused on the risks to global growth as it is on the domestic economy.

Driving the resurgent internatio­nalism inside the Federal Reserve is concern about how dollar strength – reinforced by aggressive policy easing abroad – could keep US inflation too low when the Fed’s policy rate is close to zero.

Another worry is a global economy that’s lumbering along without a prominent engine of growth, said Jon Faust, a former adviser to Fed chairwoman Janet Yellen.

“We have learned that the world is a more fragile place,” said Faust, who is now the director of the Center for Financial Economics at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. “At times like this, you don’t want to risk a significan­t slip, because globally there are so few economies with really strong policy options.”

The Fed’s decision on Wednesday to hold its benchmark rate target at 0.25 percent to 0.5 percent and lower the path of future hikes comes after global finance ministers and central bank governors agreed in Shanghai last month to use all policy tools to strengthen growth.

Yellen and US Treasury Secretary Jacob J Lew were among the participan­ts at the Group of 20 meeting.

The Federal Open Market Committee’s statement referred to global economic and financial developmen­ts twice, and Yellen opened her press conference with the phrase. Even with signs of life in US core inflation measures and payroll gains averaging 235 000 over the past six months, Fed officials lowered their median estimate on how far interest rates would rise this year to just two hikes instead of the four they published in December.

“Their view is: worry about the rest of the world now, and then worry about US inflation later,” said Torsten Slok, the chief internatio­nal economist at Deutsche Bank in New York. “Time will tell if that is an appropriat­e strategy.”

The less aggressive rate path comes amid rising expectatio­ns of additional easing by the Bank of Japan (BoJ) and more monetary stimulus put in place by the European Central Bank (ECB) this month.

The moves by ECB president Mario Draghi and BoJ Governor Haruhiko Kuroda “have gotten deep into the psyche of Fed officials,” said Chris Rupkey, chief financial economist with Bank of Tokyo Mitsubishi in New York.

“The world’s problems are not over yet, and until someone upgrades the growth forecast, the already reluctant Fed is unlikely to strike out very far on its own.”

The new policy emphasis focuses on restrained divergence from other central banks and sensitivit­y to the risks policy actions could have on foreign economies and the US through channels such as a strong currency, which can keep inflation too low and depress manufactur­ing and exports.

“They consistent­ly tie back the internatio­nal story to the US economy and inflation,” said Luke Tilley, chief econo- mist at Wilmington Trust Company in Delaware. “I think it is appropriat­e, but they are being quite risk-averse.”

David Lipton, the first deputy managing director of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF), recently said it was time for policy makers to take action – as they had pledged in Shanghai – or risk a self-reinforcin­g cycle of retrenched capital spending, low productivi­ty, deflation, and stagnant growth. The global economy is at a “delicate juncture where the risk of derailment has grown,” he said in March 8 comments in Washington. Conditions have deteriorat­ed in recent months.

The IMF in January cut its world growth outlook to 3.4 percent, from 3.6 percent, as China’s economy cooled and slumping commodity prices pulled down the forecast for emerging market economies.

“We will use all policy tools – monetary, fiscal and structural – individual­ly and collective­ly to achieve these goals,” G-20 officials said in their communique on February 27.

“Monetary policies will continue to support economic activity and ensure price stabil- ity, consistent with central banks’ mandates, but monetary policy alone cannot lead to balanced growth.”

In her press conference, Yellen didn’t spend a lot of time enumeratin­g the risks to the global economy. She talked about a “slight downgradin­g” of global growth forecasts.

China’s slowdown “hasn’t proven a great surprise,” while China and Mexico are feeling the effects of lower oil prices, she noted.

Taken together, however, the general slog of growth worldwide is why “a slightly lower path for the federal funds rate will be appropriat­e to achieve our objectives,” she said.

Her remarks may have understate­d what seems to be a strong consensus among Federal Open Market Committee participan­ts that rates can’t rise too quickly.

Nine officials estimated two more rate hikes would be sufficient to achieve their forecasts this year. In December, only four officials pencilled in two rate hikes for 2016.

A slower pace of Fed rate hikes is critical for emerging markets which are already struggling with low commodity prices and dollar-denominate­d corporate debt, said Michael Arone, chief investment strategist at State Street Global Advi- sors in Boston.

“Emerging markets make up 40 percent to 50 percent of global gross domestic product,” Arone said. Monetary policies can “buy time” for politician­s to put in place fiscal and structural policies that can boost economic growth, he said. “The problem is that is not happening at a pace people would like.” – Bloomberg

 ?? PHOTO: BLOOMBERG ?? Janet Yellen, the chairwoman of the US Federal Reserve, during a news conference following a Federal Open Market Committee meeting in Washington on Wednesday.
PHOTO: BLOOMBERG Janet Yellen, the chairwoman of the US Federal Reserve, during a news conference following a Federal Open Market Committee meeting in Washington on Wednesday.

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