The Jerusalem Post

Fed lifts rates by half point, biggest jump in 22 years

- • By HOWARD SCHNEIDER and ANN SAPHIR

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Federal Reserve on Wednesday raised its benchmark overnight interest rate by half a percentage point, the biggest jump in 22 years. The US central bank’s chief made an appeal to Americans struggling with high inflation to be patient while officials take the hard measures to bring it under control.

In a widely expected move, the Fed set its target federal funds rate to a range between 0.75% and 1% in a unanimous decision. Fed Chair Jerome Powell said policymake­rs were ready to approve half-percentage-point rate hikes at upcoming policy meetings in June and July.

The level of specificit­y – effectivel­y announcing Fed rate hikes in advance – was unusual, but reflected Powell steering a course between high inflation that requires a strong Fed response, and trying to avoid the sort of overkill that might tip the economy into recession.

In a news conference after the release of the Fed’s policy statement, Powell explicitly ruled out raising rates by three-quarters of a percentage point in a coming meeting, a comment that triggered a stock market rally.

But he also made clear that the rate increases the Fed already has in mind were “not going to be pleasant” as they force Americans to pay more for home mortgages and auto loans, and possibly dent asset values.

The Fed also said it would start next month to reduce the roughly $9 trillion stash of assets accumulate­d during its efforts to fight the economic impact of the coronaviru­s pandemic as another lever to bring inflation under control.

“It’s very unpleasant,” Powell said of the impact on households of inflation, which is running about three times the Fed’s 2% target. “If you’re a normal economic person, then you

probably don’t have [...] that much extra [...] to spend and it’s immediatel­y hitting your spending on groceries

[... ] on gasoline, on energy and things like that. So we understand the pain involved.”

STABLE PRICES

Powell told reporters that he and his Fed colleagues were determined to restore price stability even if that meant steps that would lead to lower business investment and household spending, and slower economic growth. The implicatio­ns of inflation getting out of hand, he said, were worse.

“In the end, everyone is better off [...] with stable prices,” Powell said.

Still, Powell said he felt the US economy is performing well, and strong enough to withstand the coming rate increases without being driven into recession or even seeing a significan­t rise in unemployme­nt.

Despite a drop in gross domestic product over the first three months of this year, “household spending and business fixed investment remain strong. Job gains have been robust,” the central bank’s Federal Open Market Committee said in its policy statement.

Officials sharpened their descriptio­n of the risks for elevated inflation to persist, especially with factors that have arisen since the start of the year, including the war in Ukraine and new coronaviru­s lockdowns in China.

“The Committee is highly attentive to inflation risks,” the Fed said in language analysts interprete­d as a sign of the Fed’s commitment to push interest rates as high as needed to get inflation, and the expectatio­ns surroundin­g its future path, back to the 2% target.

The statement said the Fed’s balance sheet, which soared to about $9 trillion as the central bank tried to shelter the economy from the pandemic, would be allowed to decline by $47.5 billion per month in June, July and August and by up to $95 billion per month starting in September.

Policymake­rs did not issue fresh economic projection­s after this week’s meeting, but data since their last gathering in March have given no definitive sense that inflation, wage growth, or a torrid pace of hiring had begun to slow.

 ?? (Brendan McDermid/Reuters) ?? A TRADER WORKS, as Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell is seen delivering remarks on a screen, on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange.
(Brendan McDermid/Reuters) A TRADER WORKS, as Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell is seen delivering remarks on a screen, on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange.

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