Houston Chronicle

Fed plans to leave interest rates unchanged

- By Jeanna Smialek

WASHINGTON — Federal Reserve officials don’t plan to cut interest rates again unless economic data begin to show cracks, a message reinforced by the minutes from their October meeting.

After the Fed cut interest rates last month — its third reduction this year — most officials thought that policy “would be well calibrated” to support the economy, according to the minutes, unless something were to cause “a material reassessme­nt” of the outlook.

A “couple” of officials even thought the Fed should make it clear that another rate cut was unlikely “unless incoming informatio­n was consistent with a significan­t slowdown in the pace of economic activity.”

The meeting notes, released Wednesday, underline that the central bank plans to leave its policy unchanged for some time, even as President Donald Trump urges it to slash borrowing costs to zero or below.

While Trump has urged the Fed to stimulate the economy and cheapen the dollar, the central bank operates independen­tly. Officials set policy to achieve stable inflation and maximum employment over time, and their job is to smooth over business cycles.

Fed policymake­rs were raising interest rates steadily as recently as December 2018 to rein in a growing economy, but they changed their approach this year as tensions from Trump’s trade war and slowing growth abroad weighed on the U.S. economic outlook and inflation languished below the Fed’s target.

They’ve cut interest rates three times since late July, to a range between 1.5 percent and 1.75 percent.

“A number of participan­ts were concerned that weakness in business spending, manufactur­ing, and exports could spill over to labor markets and consumer spending and threaten the economic expansion,” the minutes note.

Now, consumer spending is holding up, the labor market is strong, and trade tensions could ease — so policymake­rs have been making it clear that they want to pause and watch how the economy is shaping up before taking further action.

“My own thinking is that the committee has made a pretty substantia­l adjustment in the path of rates,” Lael Brainard, a Fed governor, said Wednesday, speaking in a CNBC interview. “It will take some time to see that work through the economy. I certainly want to monitor and assess how the economy is reacting to those cuts.”

While they plan to take a break from lowering rates, officials are not inclined to start lifting them anytime soon.

While unemployme­nt, currently at 3.6 percent, is hovering near a 50-year low, wage growth has been increasing at a moderate pace and companies have been slow to lift prices. That has kept inflation below the central bank’s 2 percent goal.

“The reason why we raise interest rates, generally, is because we see inflation as moving up, or in danger of moving up significan­tly,” Powell said at a news conference after the October move. “We really don’t see that now.”

Weak price increases may be good news for shoppers, but they pose a risk for the central bank. If inflation is mired at low levels for an extended period, expectatio­ns for future price changes can drift lower, locking in the muted increases. That leaves the Fed with less room to cut interest rates in a recession, since interest rates include inflation.

The newly released minutes show that officials are concerned as price indexes continue to miss their mark.

“Weakness in the global economy, perception­s of downside risks to growth and subdued global inflation pressures were cited as factors tilting inflation risk to the downside,” the minutes note. “A few participan­ts commented that they expected inflation to run below 2 percent for some time.”

And while they painted an improving picture of the U.S. economic outlook overall — the labor market “remained strong,” and “there were some tentative signs that trade tensions were easing” — officials at the last Fed meeting also flagged risks.

“Some further signs of a global slowdown in economic growth emerged,” the minutes said, and participan­ts noted that “the risk that the weakness in domestic business spending, manufactur­ing and exports could give rise to slower hiring and weigh on household spending remained prominent.”

The Fed meets next Dec. 10-11.

 ?? Eric Baradat / Getty Images ?? At a news conference, Fed Chairman Jerone Powell noted that inflation doesn’t appear to be a problem now.
Eric Baradat / Getty Images At a news conference, Fed Chairman Jerone Powell noted that inflation doesn’t appear to be a problem now.

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