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Powell says jobs report tells of fight ahead

Indicates more rate hikes may be needed

- Paul Davidson

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said Tuesday that last week’s booming jobs report underscore­s why officials expect to approve additional interest rate hikes to tame inflation and similar data in the months ahead could require an even sharper rise in rates than projected.

“It kind of shows you why we think this is a process that will take a significant period of time,” Powell said in a discussion at the Economic Club of Washington, D. C. “I think it underscore­s the message … that we have a significant road ahead to get inflation down to 2%.”

The Fed last week raised its key short- term interest by a quarter percentage point to a range of 4.5% to 4.75% and Powell said a “couple more” similar hikes were likely, in line with the Fed’s December forecast. That would push the rate to a range of 5% to 5.25% from near zero last March, capping the most aggressive flurry of rate increase in four decades.

Financial markets, however, had priced in just one more quarter- point increase. Powell said that was possible if inflation eased more quickly than anticipate­d, though a larger rise was also possible if inflation proved more intractabl­e.

On Friday, however, the Labor Department reported that employers added 517,000 jobs in January after payroll growth had slowed to a pace of under 300,000 the past three months of 2022 from more than 400,000 earlier. The unemployme­nt rate fell to a 54year low of 3.4%.

Strong job growth and robust employer demand for workers could spur faster wage gains that trigger higher consumer prices.

Since then, the Standard & Poor’s 500 index has fallen and Treasury yields have risen. Markets now expect two more quarter- point rate increases.

“Since the labor market report, financial conditions are more in line with ( Fed rate forecasts) than they were before,” Powell said.

He did note the Fed’s aim is to lower inflation, not hobble the job market. “What we’re trying to do is get inflation down,” he said. “We’re not targeting the unemployme­nt rate.”

Powell acknowledg­ed inflation pulled back notably last year and Fed officials expect it to ease further in 2023. Consumer prices rose 6.5% annually in December, down from 7.1% in November and a 40- year high of 9.1% in June.

“The disinflationary process has begun,” he said.

But he also said it could be difficult to sustainabl­y reduce inflation without cooling the labor market. He noted that a single jobs report could be a blip.

He added, however, “If we continue to see strong labor market reports and high inflation reports that maybe we have to do more than what’s” expected in terms of hiking rates.

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