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Fed's Brainard Stresses Priority of Curbing Inflation Down to 2% Goal

Published 01/12/2022, 04:06 PM
Updated 01/12/2022, 04:51 PM
© Reuters

By Yasin Ebrahim

Investing.com - Federal Reserve Governor Lael Brainard is expected to stress the central bank’s priority to get inflation back down to 2%, while protecting economic gains already made to support a full recovery.

“[I]nflation is too high … Our monetary policy is focused on getting inflation back down to 2 percent while sustaining a recovery that includes everyone,” Brainard said in prepared remarks for a confirmation hearing before the Senate Banking Committee slated for Thursday.

The remarks arrived just as data showed U.S. inflation rose 7% for the year through December, the fastest pace since 1982.

“Today the economy is making welcome progress, but the pandemic continues to pose challenges. Our priority is to protect the gains we have made and support a full recovery,” Brainard said.

The Fed governor will also point to the progress made on the Fed’s labor market objective, which forms part of the central bank’s dual mandate.

“We are seeing the strongest rebound in growth and decline in unemployment of any recovery in the past five decades,” according to remarks from Brainard.

“Over the past year, unemployment has fallen by 2.8 percentage points, and growth is estimated to be around 5 1/2 percent, according to a variety of private forecasts.”

 

 

Latest comments

Even if one were to believe the Fed honestly did not see this coming (they did) There was no reason once it was here not to cut bond purchases immediately. They are jyst waiting to get a 3% CPI in a couple months and say they want to review the data a bit longer. lol
What labor market objective? Do they have any data on how many have left the job market? Pretending that the job market is making a great progress isn't going to change ground reality. At the end of the day, does the FED person really care as long as she/he pretend they are doing the best they can?
can't please everyone
Its an election year, so that means theyll do whatever they can to make things “work.”
stocks go down=> emergency meeting to prip up stonks. inflation goes up 7%=> maybe 0.25% rate hike in March
What do you mean?
They say we are going to respond accordingly, bit have done nothing.
The whole Fed Board has made millions in personal profits within the bubble they created via Fed printing presses and market manipulation over the past 18 months (Kaplan, Rosengren & Clarida, etc). If they were a business they'd all be in jail for insider trading rather than be allowed to retire early. The ones who remain on the board -  probably don't want to rock the boat before they get all of the millions in profits they've made via the bubble out.
They should have been worried when CPI broke 3%, not 7%.
Well.... 1) Up until about a month ago they had spent 18 months saying inflation would be 'transitory' and start falling by well... Sept 2021. Only now are they admitting they got it 100% wrong  2) Powell still trying to claim 99% of inflation is solely due to supply bottlenecks and increased demand and inflation will fall rapidly once resolved. Let's ignore the 0% interest rates for 2 years, $7 Trillion in Fed printing debt pumped in and the fact pre covid the economy was already red hot and 95% of industry was only on pause during covid so has largely kicked off again where it left off. Indeed certain areas have grown rapidly in the past 18 months while others such as property have entered major bubbles due to pauses in construction/stimulus savings pumping up prices.
Interesting how the fed immediately responds with trillions of dollars of corporate charity when unemployment goes outside the target, then does nothing for the average american being hit by inflation, crooks..
They are stuck between a rock and hard ice hence the perpetual talk about raising interest rates. Empty words after the Titanic has already hit the iceberg.
Math question: If growth is 5.5% and inflation is 7%, how much real growth do we have? -1.5%! And that can hardly be called growth if uou ask me...
Its not that straight forward. 7% of the GDP is “fluff” due to inflation…so 7% of the 5.5%. 19% of GDP is actually government transfer payments…so 19% of the 5.5%. Both inflation and gov. Transfer payments should be subtracted, so real growth is closer to 4%, not 5.5%.
Insert Jimmy McMillan meme: “Infaltion is too damn high!”
When the biggest dove in the FED is talking getting inflation back to 2% you know they mean business this time.  I wouldn't be owning too much growth/no profit companies but what do I know
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