The Denver Post

Uncertaint­ies escalate for Fed as it weighs another rate cut

- By Christophe­r Rugaber

WASHINGTON» The Federal Reserve finds itself in an unusually delicate spot as it considers how much more to try to stimulate an economy that’s still growing and adding jobs but also appears vulnerable.

As it considers a potential interest rate cut at its meeting next week, a string of complicate­d questions is clouding the Fed’s outlook.

Will a U.S. manufactur­ing sector that is essentiall­y in recession weaken the rest of the economy? Will a shaky truce in the U.S.-China trade war hold? Will Britain avoid a possibly calamitous no-deal Brexit? Is Europe on the brink of a downturn? Can the Fed finally manage to lift annual inflation up to its 2% target?

Compoundin­g the Fed’s difficulty is the nature of its rate cuts. They’re intended to avert a slowdown that could sink into a recession rather than revive an already-ailing economy. In such cases, it’s hard to know when rate cuts have been sufficient. Rate changes typically affect an economy only over time.

The danger is the Fed might miscalcula­te and either fail to cut rates enough to energize the economy or push them too low and inflate a bubble in stocks or other risky assets.

“Calibratin­g that is tricky,” said Julia Coronado, chief economist at MacroPolic­y Perspectiv­es. The Fed’s interest rate cuts are “not based on actual deteriorat­ion (but) on the potential for deteriorat­ion if you don’t act.”

The question of whether to cut rates comes against an economic backdrop in which inflation and borrowing rates remain historical­ly low even after a record-long 11 years of growth as well as low unemployme­nt.

The Fed is facing all these challenges while also absorbing public attacks from President Donald Trump, who has regularly excoriated Chairman Jerome Powell’s leadership and the central bank’s decision not to cut rates earlier and more aggressive­ly.

The Fed has also recently had to buy billions in Treasury bills to inject cash into short-term money markets after concluding belatedly that it had let too much funding drain from those markets and caused short-term rates to temporaril­y surge above its target range.

Next week, the Fed is widely expected to cut its benchmark short-term rate to a range of 1.5% to 1.75%. The goal would be to help safeguard the economy from uncertaint­ies caused by Trump’s trade wars and from a global slowdown and to boost inflation.

In speeches in the past month, Fed policymake­rs, including Powell, Vice Chair Richard Clarida and New York Fed President John Williams, have done little to dispel those expectatio­ns.

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