Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Yellen sees high inflation into ’22

Treasury chief calls current circumstan­ces ‘temporary pain’

- LINUS CHUA

WASHINGTON — Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said she expects price increases to remain high through the first half of 2022, but rejected criticism that the U. S. risks losing control of inflation.

Inflation is expected to ease in the second half as issues ranging from supply bottleneck­s, a tight U.S. labor market and other factors arising from the pandemic improve, Yellen said on CNN’s “State of the Union” on Sunday. The current situation reflects “temporary” pain, she said.

“I don’t think we’re about to lose control of inflation,” Yellen said, pushing back on criticism by former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers this month. “Americans haven’t seen inflation like we have experience­d recently in a long time. But as we get back to normal, expect that to end.”

On Friday, Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell sounded a note of heightened concern over persistent­ly high inflation as he made clear that the central bank will begin tapering its bond purchases shortly but remain patient on raising interest rates.

The S& P 500 index posted its first decline in eight days. Powell said policies are “well-positioned” to manage a range of outcomes.

Yellen declined to say how she’s advised President Joe Biden on his decision whether to reappoint Powell. However, she said that financial regulation “markedly strengthen­ed” under Powell’s term, as it did during hers and under her predecesso­r, Ben Bernanke.

As the pandemic added stress to the financial markets, “the core of our financial system did very well because of the improvemen­ts in capital liquidity, risk management [and] stress testing,” Yellen said. “And those improvemen­ts have stayed in place during the Powell regime.”

She also said it’s “utterly essential” to raise the U.S. debt ceiling, reiteratin­g earlier warnings about the consequenc­es of a potential U.S. default.

The U.S. posted the second-largest annual budget deficit on record for 2021 as pandemic-relief spending sustained the federal government’s massive borrowing needs.

The deficit for the fiscal year through September was $2.77 trillion, compared with the $3.1 trillion peak seen in the previous year, according to a Treasury Department report in the past week. As a share of the economy, the deficit narrowed to 12.4% in the fiscal year, from 15% in 2020 — the biggest since World War II.

“It’s a housekeepi­ng matter, doing what’s necessary to pay our bills,” she said. “I have confidence it will get done.”

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