Times-Herald

Powell’s stark message: Inflation fight may cause recession

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WASHINGTON (AP) — The Federal Reserve delivered its bluntest reckoning Wednesday of what it will take to finally tame painfully high inflation: Slower growth, higher unemployme­nt and potentiall­y a recession.

Speaking at a news conference, Chair Jerome Powell acknowledg­ed what many economists have been saying for months: That the Fed's goal of engineerin­g a "soft landing" — in which it would manage to slow growth enough to curb inflation but not so much as to cause a recession — looks increasing­ly unlikely.

"The chances of a soft landing," Powell said, "are likely to diminish" as the Fed steadily raises borrowing costs to slow the worst streak of inflation in four decades. "No one knows whether this process will lead to a recession or, if so, how significan­t that recession would be."

Before the Fed's policymake­rs would consider halting their rate hikes, he said, they would have to see continued slow growth, a "modest" increase in unemployme­nt and "clear evidence" that inflation is moving back down to their 2% target.

"We have got to get inflation behind us," Powell said. "I wish there were a painless way to do that. There isn't."

Powell's remarks followed another substantia­l threequart­ers of a point rate hike — its third straight — by the Fed's policymaki­ng committee. Its latest action brought the Fed's key short-term rate, which affects many consumer and business loans, to 3% to 3.25%. That's its highest level since early 2008.

Falling gas prices have slightly lowered headline inflation, which was a still-painful 8.3% in August compared with a year earlier. Those declining prices at the gas pump might have contribute­d to a recent rise in President Joe Biden's public approval ratings, which Democrats hope will boost their prospects in the November midterm elections.

On Wednesday, the Fed officials also forecast more jumbo-size hikes to come, raising their benchmark rate to roughly 4.4% by year's end — a full point higher than they had envisioned as recently as June. And they expect to raise the rate again next year, to about 4.6%. That would be the highest level since 2007.

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