The Palm Beach Post

Fed chief might face tough final year

Trump camp likely to frown on rate hikes by Janet Yellen, colleagues.

- By Don Lee Tribune Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — After three years of almost single-handedly juicing up the slow-growing economy, Janet Yellen and the Federal Reserve should be looking at easier days ahead.

Yellen, in what will probably be her last full year as Fed chair, may finally get help from somewhere else in Washington.

Tax cuts and infrastruc­ture s p e n d i n g p l a n n e d b y P r e s - ident- elec t Donald Trump, if backed by the Republican-controlled Congress, would lighten the load for a Fed whose easymoney policies have been the primary economic support for the nation.

She is already breathing easier on the Fed’s employment mandate; the jobless rate has fallen to a nine-year low of 4.6 percent. Inflation, too, is under control and, by all accounts, creeping toward the central bank’s optimal level of 2 percent.

And yet Yellen may come under as much economic and political pressure as ever on both the Fed’s policy and the independen­ce of the institutio­n.

The Trump administra­tion is almost certain to push back as she and her colleagues lift interest rates from historical lows. The Fed began with a small increase in its benchmark rate this month, only the second rise in more than a decade. But officials signaled a quickening of rate hikes in 2017.

As a presidenti­al candidate, Trump offered contradic tory views when it came to the Fed. He first applauded Yellen, saying he too was a “low-interest-rate person.” Later he accused the Fed leader of keeping rates low for political reasons and said he would most likely replace Yellen when her four-year term expires in early 2018. Trump’s pick for Treasury secretary, Steven Mnuchin, said after his selection that he thinks Yellen has done a good job.

No one knows for sure where Trump and his economic team stand on monetary policy. The New York real estate developer, who has capitalize­d on cheap rates, didn’t comment or tweet about the Fed’s widely expected rate bump on Dec. 14. But if history is any guide, he’s not likely to favor faster interest rate increases.

“No president ever does,” said Alice Rivlin, a former Fed vice chairwoman from 1996 to 1999.

That’s because higher interest rates increase borrowing costs for businesses and consumers, which tends to slow lending and investment­s. The interest-sensitive housing market will be particular­ly vulnerable. The 10-year bond yield, a benchmark for mortgages, already has jumped to 2.6 percent from 1.8 percent in early November on expectatio­ns that a major fiscal stimulus would lift economic growth and inflation.

Fed policymake­rs have forecast the equivalent of three quarter-point rate increases for next year, but some economists see four or more hikes coming. And while Yellen has been cautious t o re s e r ve j u d g ment o n a ny anticipate­d fiscal stimulus, she seemed somewhat cool to the idea when asked at a news conference immediatel­y after the Fed’s rate increase announceme­nt.

“I do want to make clear that I have not recommende­d running a hot economy as some sort of experiment,” she said.

Like other economists, Yellen may be questionin­g whether this is the right time for a massive fiscal stimulus. Given that the economy is at or near full employment — the point at which much faster growth could spur inflation — Yellen will be watching carefully and could “take away the punch bowl just as the party gets going,” as the famous saying goes on the Fed’s job to keep the economy from overheatin­g.

On top of potential clashes over policy, Trump and an emboldened Republican-controlled Congress appear eager to rein in the century-old Fed by authorizin­g so-called audits of its monetary policy decisions and reducing its regulatory power.

 ?? PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Federal Reserve Board Chair Janet Yellen, seen preparing to testify before the House Financial Services Committee in Washington last September, is likely to face resistance from the incoming Trump administra­tion as she and her colleagues lift interest...
PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS / ASSOCIATED PRESS Federal Reserve Board Chair Janet Yellen, seen preparing to testify before the House Financial Services Committee in Washington last September, is likely to face resistance from the incoming Trump administra­tion as she and her colleagues lift interest...

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