Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Fed: Rates to stay ultra-low even as inflation rises

- Martin Crutsinger

WASHINGTON – The Federal Reserve announced a significant change Thursday in how it manages interest rates by saying it plans to keep rates near zero even after inflation has exceeded its 2% target level.

The change means the Fed is prepared to tolerate a higher level of inflation than it generally has in the past. And it means that borrowing rates for households and businesses – for everything from auto loans and home mortgages to corporate expansion – will likely remain ultra-low for years to come.

The new goal states that “following periods when inflation has been running persistent­ly below 2%, appropriat­e monetary policy will likely aim to achieve inflation moderately above 2% for some time.”

Behind the Fed’s new thinking is an ailing economy in the grip of a viral pandemic and a stubbornly low inflation rate that has long defied the Fed’s efforts to raise it.

The policy change underscore­s the Fed’s belief that an exceedingl­y low jobless rate is critically important for the economy and for individual Americans and that it should focus its efforts on achieving it.

In a speech detailing the changes, Chairman Jerome Powell made clear that the policy change reflects the reality that high inflation – once the biggest threat to the economy – no longer appears to pose a serious danger, even when unemployme­nt is low and the economy is growing strongly. Rather, Powell said, the economy has changed in a way that allows the Fed to keep rates much lower than it otherwise would without igniting price pressures.

“The economy is always evolving,” Powell said. “Our revised statement reflects our appreciati­on for the benefits of a strong labor market, particular­ly for many in low- and moderate-income communitie­s, and that a robust job market can be sustained without causing an unwelcome increase in inflation.”

Powell suggested that the Fed’s decision before the pandemic hit to keep rates low had helped to finally improve the fortunes of low-income workers, who had previously shared in few of the benefits of a record-long economic expansion.

“The robust job market,” he said, “was delivering life-changing gains for many individual­s, families and communitie­s, particular­ly at the lower end of the income spectrum.”

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