Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Fed notes disclose trade war concerns

- JIM TANKERSLEY

WASHINGTON — Federal Reserve Board policymake­rs raised concerns at their March meeting about the prospect of the United States heading into a global trade war, zeroing in on potential harm to American farmers such a clash would cause, according to minutes of the meeting released by the Fed on Wednesday.

The officials also expressed uncertaint­y about how newly enacted tax cuts would affect the economy, partly because the cuts are expected to exacerbate the swelling of federal budget deficits, and because some of the cuts are to expire in the years ahead. Policymake­rs also expressed unanimous, increased confidence in the strength of the country’s economic recovery, even accounting for trade and tax uncertaint­ies.

The minutes of the meeting, on March 20-21, provide more detail into the concerns being raised by the farm in-

dustry about the potential domestic effect of President Donald Trump’s plan to impose a 25 percent tariff on imported steel and 10 percent on aluminum.

“Participan­ts did not see the steel and aluminum tariffs, by themselves, as likely to have a significan­t effect on the national economic outlook,” the minutes read, “but a strong majority of participan­ts viewed the prospect of retaliator­y trade actions by other countries, as well as other issues and uncertaint­ies associated with trade policies, as downside risks for the U.S. economy. Contacts in the agricultur­al sector reported feeling particular­ly vulnerable to retaliatio­n.”

Fed policymake­rs also said at the meeting that they expected the combinatio­n of the tax cuts signed by Trump last year and a bipartisan congressio­nal deal this year to increase federal spending to give economic output “a significan­t boost” in the next few years.

However, the minutes reflect

officials’ uncertaint­y about how big that boost might be, and when it might come, because there is little historical precedent for such fiscal stimulus when unemployme­nt is so low. The minutes also show that policymake­rs “suggested that uncertaint­y about whether all elements of the tax cuts would be made permanent, or about the implicatio­ns of higher budget deficits for fiscal sustainabi­lity and real interest rates, represente­d sources of downside risk to the economic outlook.”

The meeting was the first under the Fed’s new chairman, Jerome Powell. At the session’s conclusion, officials announced they would raise interest rates for the sixth time since the end of the last recession, in the range of 1.5 to 1.75 percent. Officials released economic projection­s indicating that they expected to raise rates three times next year, more than the two increases in 2019 they had forecast in December. The Fed said at the time the economy was continuing to get stronger and the central bank remained on track to keep raising rates gradually.

Powell echoed those sentiments at a news conference after the meeting.

The minutes suggest that decision on interest rates generated little controvers­y: “All participan­ts agreed that the outlook for the economy beyond the current quarter had strengthen­ed in recent months,” and they expected the annual inflation rate to rise in the months to come.

But the minutes say that a “couple of participan­ts” suggested the Fed would benefit from holding off until a future meeting to raise rates, to wait for more data to confirm evidence that the rate of inflation was approachin­g the Fed’s target of 2 percent annual growth.

Officials also debated the benefits of the economy’s running hot — with unemployme­nt very low and growth above forecast trends — for a prolonged period of time, weighing the potential for drawing more workers back to the labor force against the risk of financial instabilit­y and “significan­t” inflation growth.

Officials also seemed to shrug off the increase in stock

market volatility in February, attributin­g it in part to Labor Department reports that the suggested growth in wages — and, with it, inflation — was gaining steam, which could force the Fed to raise rates faster than expected. “Many participan­ts reported that their contacts had taken the previous month’s turbulence in stride,” the minutes read.

The official statement released immediatel­y after the March meeting did not mention trade policy concerns, which roiled financial markets after the Trump administra­tion announced its plans to impose tariffs on imported steel and aluminum, as well as on some other Chinese goods. Powell acknowledg­ed those concerns at his news conference, saying that trade policy had begun to worry business leaders who speak with Fed officials. Still, he played down any immediate threat to growth.

“There’s no thought that changes in trade policy should have an effect on the current outlook,” Powell said at the news conference, adding that could change if a global trade dispute escalated.

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