Miami Herald (Sunday)

Federal Reserve widely expected to push harder to slow the economy, so inflation doesn’t hurt recovery

- BY TOM HUDSON

The Federal Reserve is not stepping on its economic brake. It is only easing off its big accelerato­r.

The central bank is widely expected to speed up efforts to slow the American economy when it meets this week.

No, it won’t raise its target short-term interest rate. Rather, it likely will slow its monthly purchases of bonds even more. effort to bring down borrowing costs and help encourage spending. Through last month, it purchased over $4 trillion of IOUs to stabilize nervous financial markets and boost confidence.

It worked. And so, in November, the Fed reduced its monthly appetite by 12.5% from its worstof-the-pandemic buying. It is still buying government securities, just spending less money doing so.

On Wednesday, the bank’s interest rate setting committee is predicted to ease off even more. It will mark a faster move to reduce its buying than it laid out just a few weeks ago. It also will be the Fed’s first explicit action in response to persistent­ly high inflation.

As much as the bank’s monetary policies are about fulfilling its twin mandates — full employment and stable prices — they also are about fueling confidence that the Fed has the courage to act to head off sustained high inflation, even if it may mean the politicall­y unfriendly action of hiking interest rates in an election year.

The Fed remains far from raising interest rates. But that time is approachin­g faster than thought earlier this fall. For now, it will focus on ending its bond-buying sooner than initially planned. However, the bond market is moving up the odds of an interest rate hike sooner in 2022. The Fed committee releases its forecast for its key interest rate as part of this week’s meeting.

It will make clear, that what had been a patient Fed helping a pandemicin­jured economy, increasing­ly is growing anxious about inflation infecting the recovery.

Tom Hudson hosts ‘The Sunshine Economy’ on WLRN-FM, where he is the vice president of news. Twitter: @HudsonsVie­w

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