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Fed’s George Says Higher US Savings May Also Mean Higher Rates Needed

Published 11/22/2022, 03:35 PM
Updated 11/22/2022, 04:09 PM
&copy Bloomberg. Esther George, president and chief executive officer of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, speaks during a Bloomberg Television interview at the Jackson Hole economic symposium in Moran, Wyoming, US, on Wednesday, Aug. 24, 2022. Hedge funds are unleashing record bets the Federal Reserve will stick to its hawkish script at Jackson Hole to rein in the fastest inflation in four decades.

(Bloomberg) -- Kansas City Federal Reserve Bank President Esther George said ample US savings will help to buffer households but could also mean higher interest rates are needed to cool spending. 

George told a panel Tuesday in Santiago hosted by the Central Bank of Chile that if savings are concentrated in wealthier households who tend to spend a smaller share of their wealth, it might not provide much of an additional boost to spending.

“However, if those savings are spread more evenly across the population, including households with a higher propensity to spend out of their wealth, then the effect on the persistence of consumption is likely to be larger,” she said, requiring higher rates, notwithstanding the wider benefits.

“While high savings is likely to provide momentum to consumption and require higher interest rates, it’s certainly positive that we see that these households are wealthier, less financially constrained and better insured,” she noted. “But that said, reduced inflation will mean we have to incent saving over consumption.”

The Fed lifted interest rates by 75 basis points for the fourth straight time this month, bringing the target on its benchmark rate to a range of 3.75% to 4%. 

Investors expect the US central bank to downshift to a smaller, half-point, increase when it gathers for its Dec. 13-14 meeting and for the benchmark rate to peak at about 5% next year, according to pricing of contracts in futures markets.

©2022 Bloomberg L.P.

Latest comments

Fed Funds: 9.0 % /2024 ??
Need to tie the savings rate to the prime rate as most borrowing rates are. Prime rates have gone up but savinds rates are lagging way behind still well below the 1% level.
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