Manila Bulletin

US economy growing, but ‘not fully recovered’

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WASHINGTON (AFP) - The US economic recovery is showing signs of progress, but the Federal Reserve said Wednesday it is not yet ready to end the easy money policies it implemente­d as the pandemic began last year.

Widespread vaccinatio­ns have helped boost business activity and employment, though the sectors hardest hit by the Covid-19 pandemic ''have shown improvemen­t but have not fully recovered,'' the Fed's policysett­ing Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) announced following its two-day meeting.

The US central bank cut its benchmark lending rate to zero at the start of the Covid-19 pandemic and implemente­d a massive bond-buying program aimed at providing liquidity to help the world's largest economy weather the damage.

The FOMC cautioned that ''risks to the economic outlook remain'' and again pledged to keep those policies in place until it sees ''substantia­l further progress'' on its maximum employment and inflation targets.

While the US economy has recovered millions of jobs and brought the unemployme­nt rate down, it also has seen inflation surge.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell again tried to tamp down concerns about the price spikes he described as mostly temporary and limited to certain sectors.

''The process of reopening the economy is unpreceden­ted, as was the shutdown at the onset of the pandemic,'' Powell said.

Central bankers met during an uncertain moment for the world's largest economy. The fast-spreading Delta variant of Covid-19 has prompted some parts of the United States to reimpose mask-wearing rules and sparked worries it could undermine the recovery.

Speaking to reporters after the policy meeting, Powell was alternatel­y upbeat and cautious, but seemed untroubled by the impact of rising infections on the economy.

However he acknowledg­ed that inflation has already risen well above the Fed's two-percent goal -- the annual consumer price index (CPI) hit 5.4 percent in June, the highest since August 2008 -- and recognized inflation could continue higher.

''As the reopening continues, other constraint­s could continue to limit how quickly supply can adjust, raising the possibilit­y that inflation could turn out to be higher and more persistent than we expect.''

Powell said the price increases are not widespread and largely the result supply bottleneck­s such as the semiconduc­tor shortage that has hit the auto industry.

''We think that some of it will fall away naturally as the process of reopening the economy moves through. It could take some time.''

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