Bangkok Post

Fed minutes reaffirm gradual rate rises

FOMC continues to focus on labour and inflation, with an eye on trade battles

- CRAIG TORRES

Federal Reserve officials reaffirmed their commitment to gradually raising the benchmark lending rate amid rising risks from trade battles and emerging-market turmoil that could blunt the tailwind from fiscal policy.

The minutes of the Federal Open Market Committee’s June 12-13 gathering in Washington, released on Thursday, also highlighte­d a debate among policy makers over how many more rate increases would be needed to keep the economy on a stable footing in the long run.

A “number” of officials said it might “soon be appropriat­e” to modify language in the Fed’s post-meeting statement language that describes rates as “accommodat­ive,” according to the minutes.

“Participan­ts generally judged that, with the economy already very strong and inflation expected to run at 2% on a sustained basis over the medium term, it would likely be appropriat­e to continue gradually raising the target range for the federal funds rate to a setting that was at or somewhat above their estimates of its longer-run level by 2019 or 2020,” the minutes said.

At the Fed meeting, officials unanimousl­y raised the main lending rate for the second time in 2018 — to a target range of 1.75% to 2% — and lifted their median projection to a total of four hikes this year, from three estimated in March.

US central bankers are trying to keep the economy on a sustainabl­e path as growth gets a boost from tax cuts and additional government spending, with a “few” Fed officials saying in the minutes that fiscal policy “posed an upside risk” to the outlook.

At the same time, they’re watching closely for signs that an escalating trade war is damping business investment, the biggest contributo­r to growth in the first quarter.

“Most participan­ts noted that uncertaint­y and risks associated with trade policy had intensifie­d and were concerned that such uncertaint­y and risks eventually could have negative effects on business sentiment and investment spending,” the minutes said.

The US has imposed tariffs on imported steel and aluminium and threatened to slap more levies on other products from some of its biggest trading partners, particular­ly China and the European Union. All have vowed to retaliate in what would amount to a trade war that could raise prices and slow the global expansion.

“Despite those risks, the economy is doing very well,” chairman Jerome Powell told reporters after the decision.

He said the following week that, in principle, “changes in trade policy could cause us to have to question the outlook,” adding that business contacts were telling the Fed it might be a reason to delay investment or hiring.

Unemployme­nt was 3.8% i n May, matching the lows since the late 1960s, and the Fed’s preferred gauge of consumer prices rose 2.3% on annual basis in May.

Officials have said they will tolerate a slight overshoot to bolster inflation expectatio­ns after years of being under the target.

The minutes said US central bankers debated the amount of labour-market slack left in the economy, with “several” participan­ts saying “there was further scope for a strong labor market to continue to draw individual­s into the workforce.”

Officials also discussed risks of inflation, with “a number” of them saying it was “premature to conclude that the committee had achieved” its 2% inflation target on a sustainabl­e basis.

Others voiced the concern that “a prolonged period in which the economy operated beyond potential could give rise to heightened inflationa­ry pressures or to financial imbalances that could lead eventually to a significan­t economic downturn.”

Political and economic turmoil in some parts of Europe and emerging-market economies were also cited as a downside risk to growth and inflation by “many” Fed officials.

Most analyst projection­s show economic growth accelerate­d in the second quarter after a 2% annualised pace in the first three months of the year.

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