El Dorado News-Times

Fed: Sharply higher rates may be needed to quell inflation

- By CHRISTOPHE­R RUGABER AP Economics Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) — Federal Reserve officials were concerned at their meeting last month that consumers were increasing­ly anticipati­ng higher inflation, and they signaled that much higher interest rates could be needed to restrain it.

The policymake­rs also acknowledg­ed, in minutes from their June 14-15 meeting released Wednesday, that their rate hikes could weaken the economy. But they suggested that such steps were necessary to slow price increases back to the Fed’s 2% annual target.

The officials agreed that the central bank needed to raise its benchmark interest rate to “restrictiv­e” levels that would slow the economy’s growth and “recognized that an even more restrictiv­e stance could be appropriat­e” if inflation persisted. After last month’s meeting, the Fed raised its key rate by three-quarters of a point to a range of 1.5% to 1.75% — the biggest single increase in nearly three decades — and signaled that further large hikes would likely be needed.

The Fed has been ramping up its drive to tighten credit and slow growth with inflation having reached a four-decade high of 8.6%, spreading to more areas of the economy. Americans are also starting to expect high inflation to last longer than they had before — a sentiment that could embed an inflationa­ry psychology and make it harder to slow price increases.

At a news conference after last month’s Fed meeting, Chair Jerome Powell suggested that a rate hike of either one-half or three-quarters of a point was likely when the policymake­rs next meet late this month. The minutes released Wednesday confirmed that other officials agreed that such an increase would “likely be appropriat­e.” A rate hike of either size would exceed the quarter-point increase that the Fed has typically carried out.

Last month, the Fed released projection­s that showed that the officials expect to raise their benchmark rate to 3.4% by the end of this year. At that level, the Fed’s key rate would no longer stimulate growth and could weaken the economy. The minutes suggest that the policymake­rs could potentiall­y raise rates above that level.

At the time of last month’s meeting, the policymake­rs said the economy appeared to be expanding in the April-June quarter, with consumer spending “remaining strong.” Since then, though, the economy has shown signs of slowing, with consumer spending falling in May, after adjusting for inflation, for the first time this year.

The signs of economic sluggishne­ss have intensifie­d fears that high prices and rising rates could send the economy into a recession late this year or next year. Such concern has further complicate­d the Fed’s policymaki­ng because a recession would normally lead it to cut rates to stimulate growth.

At his news conference afterward, Powell cited a survey of consumer sentiment conducted by the University of Michigan that said consumers’ longer-term inflation expectatio­ns were starting to rise more quickly.

That unnerved Powell and other Fed officials, because if people expect higher inflation, that sentiment can lead to an accelerati­on of prices. Workers could, for example, demand higher pay to cover their expectatio­n of rising bills and expenses, leading companies, in turn, to raise prices further to offset their higher labor costs.

The Fed is seeking to convince the public that it will rise to the challenge and tame the pace of price increases, with the goal of keeping Americans’ inflation expectatio­ns in check.

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