Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

In notes, Fed keen to push rates up

- BINYAMIN APPELBAUM

Robust economic growth has increased the confidence of Federal Reserve officials that the economy is ready for higher interest rates, according to an official account of the Fed’s most recent policymaki­ng meeting in January.

The Fed cited the strength of recent economic data, accommodat­ive financial conditions and the impact of a major tax cut that took effect in January, which it said might deliver a larger-than-expected increase in near-term economic growth.

Most Fed officials predicted in December that the Fed would raise its benchmark funds rate at least three times in 2018. The account does not signal a change in those plans but suggests that Fed officials have gained confidence in that trajectory.

“A stronger outlook for economic growth raised the likelihood that further gradual policy firming would be appropriat­e,” according to the account of the Fed’s meeting Jan. 30-31, which was released

Wednesday after a standard three-week delay.

The Fed is seeking to raise rates gradually to maintain control of inflation without impeding an economic expansion that is nearing the end of its ninth year, one of the nation’s longest stretches of uninterrup­ted economic growth.

The January meeting was held before a wave of turbulence passed through global equity markets in early February, but the gyrations are unlikely to have discourage­d policymake­rs. Several Fed officials have said they remain focused on the underlying strength of economic growth.

“Based on the relatively strong economy but the continued stubbornne­ss of inflation, I’ve penciled in two hikes for 2018,” Patrick Harker, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelph­ia, said Wednesday in St. Louis.

Most of his colleagues have predicted that the Fed will raise rates at least three times in 2018, just as it did in 2017.

“If the economy evolves as I anticipate, I believe further increases in interest rates will be appropriat­e this year and next year, at a pace similar to last year’s,” Loretta Mester, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, said earlier this month.

The persistent question mark is inflation. The Fed aims to keep prices rising at an annual rate of 2 percent, but it has consistent­ly fallen short of that goal since the end of the last recession in 2009.

Most Fed officials predict that stronger growth will ultimately translate into stronger inflation, but they have made the same prediction­s repeatedly in recent years, without notable success. Some officials argue that the Fed should stop raising rates until inflation shows clear signs of revival.

The meeting account said officials had less confidence about the outlook for inflation. They “saw both upside and downside risks to the inflation outlook,” it said.

In a presentati­on at the January meeting, which was described in the account, the Fed’s staff told policymake­rs that the major theories of inflation dynamics are not strong predictors of the movement of inflation, nor effective guides to policy. The link between economic growth and inflation has weakened in recent years; the predictive value of inflation expectatio­ns is greater, but it does not offer clear guidance.

The persistent question mark is inflation. The Fed aims to keep prices rising at an annual rate of 2 percent, but it has consistent­ly fallen short of that goal since the end of the last recession in 2009.

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