The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

Fed’s disinflati­on ‘confidence’ not helped by recent data

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US FEDERAL Reserve officials worried last month that progress on inflation might have stalled and a longer period of tight monetary policy be needed to tame the pace of price increases, according to the minutes of the US central bank’s March 19-20 meeting at which policymake­rs kept a baseline view for three interest rate cuts in 2024.

“Participan­ts generally noted their uncertaint­y about the persistenc­e of high inflation and expressed the view that recent data had not increased their confidence that inflation was moving sustainabl­y down to 2 per cent,” the minutes from the meeting said, a sentiment that may have been bolstered by data released on Wednesday that showed another surprise jump in inflation.

Fed officials are debating whether the greater risk is for monetary policy to remain too tight for too long, or for the Fed to ease too soon and fail to return inflation to its 2 per cent target.

Some officials continued to

Reuters File argue that important items like housing inflation would begin to slow, with “several” saying that increases in productivi­ty could allow growth to remain strong while inflation continued to fall.

But the minutes reflected a general concern about the status of an inflation fight that seemed well in hand at the start of the year. “Participan­ts noted indicators pointing to strong economic momentum and disappoint­ing readings on inflation in recent months,” while reiteratin­g they would need greater confidence in continued disinflati­on before cutting rates, the minutes said.

“Some” officials said there were risks that Fed policy was “less restrictiv­e than desired, which could add momentum to aggregate demand and put upward pressure on inflation,” the minutes said - the sort of logic that could be used to defend another rate hike. The Fed has raised its policy rate by 5.25 percentage points since March of 2022 to combat a surge in inflation.

The consumer price index (CPI) data released on Wednesday, if anything, further undermined any certainty around inflation’s decline. The US Labor Department reported that the CPI accelerate­d to a 3.5 per cent annual rate in March from 3.2 per cent in February, and a separate “core” measure excluding food and energy prices stalled at 3.8 per cent.

Fed policymake­rs are debating when to lower the central bank’s benchmark overnight interest rate from the current 5.25 per cent-5.50 per cent range, where it has been since last July.

They meet next on April 30May 1. After the release of the latest CPI data, investors pushed out their bets on the timing of an initial rate cut to September from June.

The minutes also showed the vast majority of Fed officials judged it would be prudent to slow the runoff of the central bank’s massive holdings of Treasury bonds and mortgageba­cked securities “fairly soon.”

 ?? ?? US Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell stands backstage at the Stanford Graduate School of Business on April 3.
US Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell stands backstage at the Stanford Graduate School of Business on April 3.

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