The Evening Leader

Fed pulls back economic aid in face of rising uncertaint­ies

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WASHINGTON (AP) — If you find the current economy a bit confusing, don’t worry: So does the nation’s top economic official, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell.

At a highly anticipate­d news conference Wednesday, Powell said the Fed was sticking by its bedrock economic forecast: COVID-19 will eventually fade, which, in turn, will enable supply chain bottleneck­s to unsnarl. More people will return to the workforce, the economy will strengthen and inflation pressures will ease.

And yet the nation's leading economic figure acknowledg­ed that it isn't at all clear when or even whether things will play out the way he and other Fed officials hope. And so far, they haven’t. The Fed won't likely gain a clear view of inflation and the job market, Powell suggested, until COVID-19 and its economic consequenc­es — reduced travel, diminished spending, supply and labor shortages — further ease.

“We hope to achieve significan­tly greater clarity about where this economy’s going and what the characteri­stics of the post pandemic economy are over the first half of next year,” he said.

It's a view Powell has maintained even as inflation has jumped to a three-decade high, imposing a burden on households that are paying more for food, rent, heating oil and other necessitie­s. In his remarks Wednesday after the Fed ended its latest policy meeting, Powell acknowledg­ed the hardships that higher prices have inflicted on many families.

“People who are living paycheck to paycheck or seeing higher grocery costs, higher gasoline costs ... we understand completely what they’re going through," he said.

In the meantime, the Fed said, it will begin to try to counter those inflation pressures by reducing its $120 billion in monthly bond purchases by $15 billion a month, starting this month. Those purchases, launched last summer, have been intended to hold down long-term interest rates to spur borrowing and spending. With the economy recovering, they aren't needed, Powell suggested.

The Fed could alter the pace of its tapering, it said in a statement. It might, for example, accelerate the reductions, if inflation worsened. But if it sticks with that pace, the bond buys would end by June. That would allow the Fed to possibly raise its benchmark short-term rate, which affects a broad range of consumer and business loans and is now pegged at zero, as soon as that month.

Some economists and investors expect the Fed to do just that. Raising rates in June would be much earlier than was expected as recently as this summer, when Fed policymake­rs forecast that they wouldn't do so until late 2023. At his news conference, though, Powell downplayed the likelihood of a rate hike anytime soon. He said unemployme­nt is still too high, with 5 million fewer people working than before the pandemic. That observatio­n suggested that Powell will want to keep rates low until unemployme­nt drops as close as possible to its pre-pandemic level of 3.5%.

Yet in another sign of the economy's numerous uncertaint­ies, he also acknowledg­ed that hiring hasn't been as strong lately as he had hoped. With schools back in session last month, and a $300-a-week federal jobless benefit having expired, Powell and most economists expected that many more people would start taking jobs in September. Instead, hiring that month fizzled.

“I think there’s room for a whole lot of humility here,” the Fed chair said. “We’re learning now, we have to be humble about what we know about this economy.”

“It’s difficult enough to just forecast the economy in normal times,” he continued. “When you’re talking about global supply chains in turmoil, it’s a whole different thing. And you’re talking about a pandemic that’s holding people out of the labor force for reasons that we ... don’t have a lot of experience with. So it’s very, very difficult to forecast and not easy to set policy.”

Powell said the Fed wouldn't hesitate to raise rates if inflation accelerate­d, or if consumers and businesses began to expect higher prices, which can become a self-fulfilling trend.

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