Albany Times Union

Fed: Most of officials backed smaller hike

- By Christophe­r Rugaber

WASHINGTON — Nearly all Federal Reserve policymake­rs agreed earlier this month to slow the pace of their rate increases to a quarter-point, with only “a few” supporting a larger half-point hike.

The minutes from the Fed’s Jan. 31-Feb.1 meeting said most of the officials supported the quarter-point increase because a slower pace “would better allow them to assess the economy’s progress” toward reducing inflation to their 2 percent target.

The increase raised the Fed’s benchmark rate to a range of 4.5 percent to 4.75 percent, the highest level in 15 years. It followed a half-point rate increase in December and four threequart­er-point hikes before that.

The central bank’s rate hikes typically lead to more expensive mortgages, auto loans, credit card borrowing and business lending. Last year’s three-quarter-point rate hikes marked the fastest pace of credit tightening in four decades.

At this month’s meeting, Fed officials also unanimousl­y agreed that “ongoing increases” in the Fed’s key rate “would be appropriat­e,” which points to additional hikes in the next two meetings, at least.

Overall, the minutes released Wednesday showed that the Fed’s policymake­rs emphasized their determinat­ion to keep rates high to curb inflation even as they welcomed a slowdown since the fall.

Both Loretta Mester, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, and James Bullard, president of the St. Louis Fed, said last week that they had supported half-point increases in the Fed’s key rate at the Feb. 1 meeting. The minutes said “a few” officials supported a larger increase. This suggests that one or two more officials on the central bank’s 19-member rate-setting committee were in Mester and Bullard’s camp. The Fed does not disclose how each policymake­r voted at its ratesettin­g meetings.

Still, the minutes’ emphasis on widespread support for a quarter-point increase suggests that the Fed may continue to raise rates by the smaller increment despite a string of robust economic data. Last week, Thomas Barkin, president of the Richmond Fed, reiterated his support for quarter-point hikes at future meetings, even after new government figures showed the outlook for inflation becoming more worrisome.

At a news conference after the Fed’s meeting ended Feb. 1, Chair Jerome Powell had stressed that inflation, while still too high, was gradually cooling. He also suggested that it was still possible that the Fed could quell inflation without raising rates so high as to cause widespread layoffs and a deep recession.

“The disinflati­onary process has started,” Powell said then, referring to the steady slowdown in year-over-year inflation from a peak of 9.1 percent in June to 6.5 percent in December.

But since then, a succession of economic reports has pointed to a still-robust economy despite the Fed’s eight rate hikes over the past year. Hiring has accelerate­d, retail sales have rebounded and revised figures show that inflation pressures remain high and might require more Fed rate hikes than many had assumed.

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