The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Yellen: 'I was wrong' about inflation path

Treasury secretary says core inflation has dropped.

- Christophe­r Condon

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen gave her most direct admission yet that she made an incorrect call last year in predicting that elevated inflation wouldn’t pose a continuing problem.

“I was wrong about the path inflation would take,” Yellen said in an interview that aired Tuesday on CNN. “There have been unanticipa­ted and large shocks to the economy that have boosted energy and food prices and supply bottleneck­s that have affected our economy badly that at the time I didn’t fully understand.”

New variants of COVID-19, lockdowns in China and Russia’s war on Ukraine have all imposed shocks on the econ- omy, the Treasury chief said after attending a meeting at the White House with Pres- ident Joe Biden and Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell to address inflation.

Biden said earlier Tuesday that his role as president is to give the Fed “the space they need to do their job, adding, “I’m not going to interfere with their critically important work.” Yellen said that the Fed is taking the steps it needs to stem inflation.

Public support for Biden on handling the economy has cratered with the surge in the cost of living. Consumer prices in April rose 8.3% from a year before, close to the 40-year high reached in March.

Yellen highlighte­d how well the economy has performed in other respects, particular­ly with regard to employment. But she also made clear that she didn’t expect the same robust pace of growth and job creation the U.S. has enjoyed during the recovery from the crisis.

“Now we’re in a period of transition,” she said. “We’re not expecting to see the same kinds of job gains, monthly job gains or growth figures going forward. We’re looking at steady and stable growth and bringing inflation down.”

Asked if the U.S. had seen the worst of the inflation spike, Yellen said it was encouragin­g that core inflation — a measure that strips out energy and food prices in an effort to show the trend in underlying inflation — had dropped.

The core gauge of con- sumer prices eased to a 6.2% gain in the year through April and is expected to continue slowing in future months.

Still, Yellen noted that European countries have recently taken steps to limit their imports of Russian oil -a move that has caused global oil prices to rise. “We can’t rule out further shocks,” she said.

In a separate interview recorded Tuesday and aired Wednesday on CNBC, Yellen said that “maintainin­g full employment while bringing inflation down, that’s the president’s priority.”

She also said no decisions had been made yet on student loan forgivenes­s, and that the administra­tion hopes West Coast dockworker­s reach a labor accord with port operators to ensure that supply chains don’t become even more strained.

 ?? VALERIA MONGELLI/BLOOMBERG ?? Janet Yellen, U.S. Treasury secretary, said that last year, she didn’t fully understand unforeseen shocks to economy, such as new COVID-19 variants, lockdowns in China and Russia’s war on Ukraine.
VALERIA MONGELLI/BLOOMBERG Janet Yellen, U.S. Treasury secretary, said that last year, she didn’t fully understand unforeseen shocks to economy, such as new COVID-19 variants, lockdowns in China and Russia’s war on Ukraine.

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