Gulf News

Yellen: Economy close to reaching Fed goals

Fed chair did not address timing for future hike, but remarks support view future hikes coming

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Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen said on Monday that the central bank is close to achieving its goals on employment and inflation. Her remarks could be seen as providing support for gradual increases in interest rates.

While expressing satisfacti­on with how the economy is performing, Yellen did voice concerns about moves in Congress to limit the Fed’s independen­ce.

Yellen told an audience at the University of Michigan that unemployme­nt is now below the point the Fed views as full employment, dipping to 4.5 per cent in March. A key inflation gauge is moving toward the Fed’s 2 per cent target for price stability.

Future hikes

Yellen did not address the timing for future rate hikes, but her remarks support the view that future hikes are coming. The Fed last raised rates in March, a quarterpoi­nt move that was the second increase in three months.

“We are doing pretty well” in terms of the Fed’s goals, Yellen said. “The economy is growing at a moderate pace.”

The Fed’s next meeting is May 2-3 and most private economists believe a rate hike at that time is unlikely, but could be raised in June and again in September.

In her comments, which came in the form of a discussion led by Susan M. Collins, dean of the university’s Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy, Yellen expressed concerns about moves in Congress to limit the central bank’s independen­ce.

She specifical­ly mentioned legislatio­n that would subject the Fed’s decision on interestra­te policies to review by the Government Accountabi­lity Office, the auditing arm of Congress. She also cited a proposal to require the Fed to follow a specific formula for setting interest rates with any deviation from that formula subject to GAO reviews. “Our independen­ce is under some threat,” Yellen said, citing the various bills that have been introduced. She said these changes could end up harming the Fed’s ability to manage the economy to promote low unemployme­nt and guard against accelerati­ng inflation.

“The independen­ce of a central bank to make decisions about monetary policy free of ... political pressures is very important,” Yellen said.

Last week, the Fed revealed that officials had discussed at their March meeting the timing for the start of a process of reducing the central bank’s holdings of Treasury bonds and mortgage backed securities, which the Fed purchased as a way to lower long-term interest rates and jump-start economic growth following the 2007-2009 recession.

The minutes of the Fed’s March discussion showed that officials discussed beginning to reduce the Fed’s $4.5 trillion (Dh16.53 trillion) balance sheet by the end of this year.

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