The Mercury

US labour market warrants rates rise

- Lindsay Dunsmuir

THE US ECONOMY remains strong and the strength of the labour market calls for continued gradual increases in interest rates, despite subdued inflation, Federal Reserve chairperso­n Janet Yellen said yesterday.

“We will be paying close attention to the inflation data in the months ahead,” Yellen said in prepared remarks at an internatio­nal banking seminar in Washington. “My best guess is that these soft readings will not persist.”

Yellen also said she expected the US economy to exceed its long-term trend during the second half of the year and repeated the impact of recent hurricanes on the economy should be temporary.

The US central bank voted to hold interest rates steady at its last policy meeting in September. Since then, Yellen has repeatedly acknowledg­ed rising uncertaint­y on the path of inflation, which has been retreating from the Fed’s 2 percent target rate for much of the year.

Broad debate

Minutes from the meeting, released last Wednesday, showed policymake­rs had a broad debate about recent soft inflation and the impact on interest rates if it fails to rebound.

However, Yellen and some other key policymake­rs have also made plain that they expect to continue to gradually raise interest rates given the strength of the overall economy and continued tightening of the labour market.

The central bank has raised interest rates four times in its tightening cycle, begun in late 2015.

Fed officials largely shrugged off a weak jobs report for September and pinned the decline in employment on Hurricanes Harvey and Irma temporaril­y displacing workers.

In her speech, Yellen said the most recent wage gains contained in the September jobs report were encouragin­g and that she expected the central bank to raise interest rates further.

“We continue to expect that the ongoing strength of the recovery will warrant gradual increases in that rate to sustain a healthy labour market and stabilise inflation around our 2 percent longer-run objective.”

The central bank has raised interest rates four times in its tightening cycle which began in late 2015. The Fed currently predicts one more rate rise this year and three the next.

The Fed has two more scheduled meetings this year. – Reuters

 ??  ?? Janet Yellen is expected watch the ECB decision next week.
Janet Yellen is expected watch the ECB decision next week.
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