The Columbus Dispatch

Trump’s attack on interest rates has support

- By Rich Miller

President Donald Trump has attacked the soft underbelly of the Federal Reserve’s campaign to raise interest rates, exposing what Jerome Powell himself probably recognizes is a vulnerabil­ity.

Amid his recent avalanche of criticism, the president has repeatedly lambasted the Fed chairman and his colleagues for hiking rates when inflation isn’t a problem.

“My biggest threat is the Fed because the Fed is raising rates too fast,” Trump told Fox Business television on Oct. 16. “You look at the latest inflation numbers, they’re very low.”

Powell has so far brushed aside Trump’s criticism, portraying the central bank’s actions as a move to normalize monetary policy in an “extraordin­ary” economy and saying the Fed was sticking with its strategy of gradual rate increases. And he’s argued that the central bank needs to keep its eye on possible financial froth — the trigger for the last two recessions — as well as inflation for signs of overheatin­g.

That defense, though, may no longer be adequate if the Fed follows through with its projection­s to nudge rates into restrictiv­e territory as growth slows and inflation stays tame. By the end of 2020, a substantia­l majority of policy makers expect to raise rates above their estimate of the long-term neutral level that neither restrains nor spurs growth, their forecasts show.

“Powell’s task has been made much more complicate­d by what Trump has said,” said economist Joseph Carson. He argues that the Fed needs to raise rates to rein in buoyant asset markets and reduce the risk of destabiliz­ing financial imbalances. That considerat­ion was cited by a number of officials at their meeting last month, according to minutes of the gathering released Wednesday.

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