Arab Times

Fed is set to leave rates alone as trade conflict raises anxiety

Bank expected to set stage for tightening credit again in Sept

-

WASHINGTON, July 30, (AP): The Federal Reserve will meet this week to assess an economy that has just enjoyed a healthy spurt of growth but faces a flurry of trade fights pushed by President Donald Trump that could imperil that growth over time.

If those concerns weren’t enough, Trump has openly expressed his displeasur­e at the Fed’s interest rate increases — something no president has done publicly in more than two decades.

No one expects the Fed to announce a rate increase when its latest policy meeting ends Wednesday. But the central bank is widely expected to set the stage for tightening credit again in September for a third time this year and then likely raise rates once again by December. This year’s rate increases follow three hikes in 2017 and one each in 2015 and 2016.

The central bank’s rate increases — to a still-low level — reflect the economy’s resilience and are intended to prevent growth from overheatin­g or inflation from accelerati­ng too high. But higher rates make borrowing costlier for consumers and businesses and can weigh down stock prices. Trump has made clear he has little patience for the Fed’s efforts to restrain the economy to control inflation.

“Tightening now hurts all that we have done,” Trump tweeted earlier this month, a day after he said in a television interview that he was “not happy” with the Fed’s rate increases.

Some of Trump’s economic advisers, notably Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, have tried to strike a reassuring note that the White House doesn’t want to interfere with the Fed’s policymaki­ng.

“We as an administra­tion absolutely support the independen­ce of the Fed, and the president has made it clear that this is the Fed’s decision,” Mnuchin said on “Fox News Sunday.” “The market expects interest rates to keep going up. So, the only question is how far and for how long? And we think the Fed will be very careful in managing the economy.”

The administra­tion’s message is that although borrowing rates remain historical­ly low, tighter credit could eventually imperil an economy that grew at a brisk 4.1 percent annual rate in the April-June quarter, the government estimated Friday. Unemployme­nt is at a low 4 percent.

But there is worry, too, reflected in periodic sinking spells in financial markets, often involving developmen­ts in the Trump-led trade war, which has resulted in punitive tariffs on billions of dollars of US and foreign goods. To help ease that pain and help shore up Trump’s political support in farm states, the Trump administra­tion has rolled out a $12 billion aid package for farmers who have lost markets for their soybeans in China and elsewhere.

A battle between the United States and China — the world’s two biggest economies — could escalate and harm growth prospects in the United States as well as globally.

“I think trade and the trade war will be at the top of the Fed’s agenda when they meet,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics. “It is the No. 1 threat they see right now.”

A trade battle with escalating tariffs raises the risk of slowing growth. The Fed

would normally respond by delaying any planned rate increases or, if the harm to the economy were seen as severe enough, actually cutting rates. But higher tariffs are also likely to put upward pressure on inflation — a prospect the Fed would normally address by raising rates.

Still, if the threat to the economy grows serious enough, the Fed could slow or even suspend its rate increases.

“In the situation of a full-blown trade war, the Fed would delay hiking

interest rates,” predicted Sung Won Sohn, chief economist at SS Economics, a consulting firm. “If the higher tariffs slow economic growth and reduce employment and at the same time boost inflation, that would be the worst situation the Fed could face.”

For now, economists see signs of hope, including an agreement between the Trump administra­tion and the head of the European Commission to try to work out their trade conflict.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait