The Oklahoman

Fed Chair Powell: Inflation is cooling

Won’t prevent the effort toward full employment

- Christophe­r Rugaber

WASHINGTON – Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said Thursday that current high levels of inflation are likely to fade next year and won’t prevent the Fed from pushing toward its goal of full employment.

Powell spoke earlier this week about “tension” between the Fed’s two goals of maximum employment and keeping prices stable. In periods of high unemployme­nt, inflation is typically low, and vice versa. But inflation has jumped above the Fed’s 2% target while the unemployme­nt rate remains elevated at 5.2%.

That can complicate the Fed’s mission, because keeping its benchmark short-term interest rate low – it is currently pegged near zero – can help boost hiring, but it could also allow inflation to worsen.

In comments before the House Financial Services Committee, however, Powell said he believes inflation will decline without higher rates from the Fed raising.

Current inflation “is a function of supply side bottleneck­s over which we have no control,” Powell said. “But I would say that we do expect in the first half of next year to see some relief, depending on the bottleneck in question, and inflation should move down.”

The Fed chair also said that “we are far away from full employment, so that gives us an incentive” to keep interest rates low. Lower rates can encourage more borrowing and spending by consumers and businesses and ultimately lift hiring. Last week, Fed officials projected that their first interest hike won’t come until late next year.

Powell has also said that if there were indication­s that inflation could rise to unsustaina­ble levels, the Fed would hike rates to bring it under control.

“We just have to balance the two,” Powell said Thursday. “But I would say our expectatio­n is that inflation will come down and we won’t ultimately face that difficult trade-off of having the two goals in tension.”

Powell’s comments came in response to questions from Republican members of the committee who said that Americans are worried about rising inflation. Prices jumped 4.2% in July compared with a year earlier, according to the Fed’s preferred gauge, the largest increase in three decades.

In response to a question from Rep. Joyce Beatty, Democrat from Ohio, Powell pledged to take diversity into account as the Fed replaces two presidents of regional banks who retired on Monday after financial trades they made last year came under sharp scrutiny.

“I can absolutely guarantee you that we will work hard ... to find and give a fair shot to diverse candidates for both of those jobs,” Powell said.

 ?? SARAH SILBIGER/AP ?? Current inflation “is a function of supply side bottleneck­s over which we have no control,” Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said.
SARAH SILBIGER/AP Current inflation “is a function of supply side bottleneck­s over which we have no control,” Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said.

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