The Denver Post

Fed minutes show inflation focus

- By Jeanna Smialek

Federal Reserve officials believed that they needed to do more to slow the economy and wrestle painfully rapid inflation back under control as of their meeting early this month, minutes from the gathering showed.

The notes, released Wednesday, showed that “all participan­ts” continued to believe that rates needed to rise more, and that “a number” of them thought that monetary policy might need to be even more restrictiv­e in light of easing conditions in financial markets in the months prior.

“Participan­ts generally noted that upside risks to the inf lation outlook remained a key factor shaping the policy outlook,” the minutes said. “A number of participan­ts observed that a policy stance that proved to be insufficie­ntly restrictiv­e could halt recent progress in moderating inflationa­ry pressures.”

The takeaway is that policymake­rs were still intently focused on wrestling inflation back under control even before a spate of recent data releases showed that the economy has maintained a surprising amount of momentum at the start of 2023. In the weeks since the Fed last met, inflation data has exhibited unexpected staying power, and a range of data points have suggested that both the job market and consumer spending remain robust. A release Friday is expected to show that the Fed’s preferred inflation indicator climbed rapidly on a monthly basis in January, and that consumptio­n grew at a solid pace.

That creates a challenge for Fed officials, who had been hoping that their policy changes last year would slowly but steadily weigh on the economy, cooling demand and forcing companies to stop raising prices so quickly. If demand holds up, businesses are more likely to find that they can continue to charge more without driving away their customers.

Central bankers have raised interest rates at the fastest pace since the 1980s over the past year, pushing them from near-zero at this time in 2022 to more than 4.5% as of this month. Officials signaled in December that they might need to raise rates to above 5% this year, but those estimates have been creeping higher, to perhaps above 5.25%. And key policymake­rs have been clear that if the economy fails to slow as expected, they will do more to make sure momentum cools.

Higher interest rates weigh on the economy by making it expensive for households to borrow to buy a new car or purchase a house, and by making it pricier for businesses to expand on credit. As those transactio­ns stall, the aftershock­s trickle through the economy, slowing not just the housing and automobile markets but also the labor market and retail and services spending as a whole.

But the full effect of policy takes time to play out, which makes it difficult for central bankers to assess in real time how much policy tightening is exactly the right amount to slow the economy and bring inflation to heel. Overdoing it could come at a cost: leaving more people out of work, with lower incomes and more limited prospects, than is necessary.

Yet the 1970s taught central bankers that allowing inflation to remain high for a long time without decisively acting to bring it under control is also a painful error. Back then, the Fed allowed inf lation to run higher for years, and it eventually jumped so out of control that they had to institute draconian rate increases to wrangle prices. Unemployme­nt jumped to double-digit levels.

Officials slowed their rate increases in February, and have signaled that they will continue to raise rates by a modest quarter point per meeting pace in coming meetings. Some policymake­rs — including Loretta Mester at the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland — have been clear in public that they would have preferred a bigger move at the latest meeting.

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