Dayton Daily News

Fed to use ‘full range of tools’ amid virus

Central bank signals low interest rates through 2022.

- By Martin Crutsinger

The Federal Reserve is promising to use its “full range of tools” to pull the country out of a recession brought on by a global pandemic, signaling that it would keep interest rates low through 2022.

In its semi-annual monetary policy report to Congress, the central bank said Friday that the COVID-19 outbreak was causing “tremendous human and economic hardship across the United States and around the world.”

In response, the Fed said it’s “committed to using its full range of tools to support the U.S. economy in this challengin­g time.”

The Fed’s report comes two days after a policy meeting where the central bank kept it benchmark interest rate at a record low of zero to 0.25% and signaled that it planned to keep it there through 2022. The Fed said it would continue to buy billions of dollars of Treasury and mortgage-backed securities to support the finan

cial market.

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell will testify before congressio­nal committees for two days next week, starting Tuesday, on the new report. Lawmakers are expected to ask Powell to explain how the central bank plans to further support the economy during what is expected to be the steepest economic downturn in the last 70 years.

Powell predicted this week that the recovery will likely be slow with Americans “well into the millions” unable to get their old jobs back.

Powell’s downbeat assessment of how long it could take labor market to recover along with other renewed fears about the pandemic’s impact on the economy helped trigger a huge selloff in the market on Thursday with the Dow Jones industrial average falling 1,861.82 points, or 6.9%.

After the market plunge, President Donald Trump sent out a tweet criticizin­g the Fed’s views that a full economic recovery could take a long time.

“The Federal Reserve is wrong so often,” Trump tweeted. “I see the numbers also, and do MUCH better than they do. We will have a very good Third Quarter, a great Fourth Quarter, and one of our best ever years in 2021.”

The report submitted to Congress this week included economic projection­s from Powell and other top Fed officials. They showed that Fed officials expect a steep drop in economic growth of 6.4% this year with unemployme­nt remaining at a sharply elevated 9.3% through this year.

A recently as February, unemployme­nt was at a half-century low of 3.5%,

The economic projection­s showed that the Fed’s key interest rate, which the central bank cut in March to a record low near zero, is expected to remain at that level through the end of 2022 with only two of the 15 Fed officials expecting a rate higher than zero by late 2022.

The Fed did not announce any new policy initiative­s at its meeting this week, but financial analysts believe that those could be unveiled later this year, depending on how the economy performs in the second half.

The Fed noted a sharp deteriorat­ion in the labor market with nearly 20 million jobs lost since February, “reversing almost 10 years of job gains.”

“The most severe job losses have been sustained by the socioecono­mic groups that are disproport­ionately represente­d among low-wage jobs,” according to the report.

 ??  ?? Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell

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