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Fed's rate path balances inflation fight and pandemic unknowns, Barkin says

Published 03/18/2022, 02:46 PM
Updated 03/18/2022, 02:51 PM
© Reuters. Apples are displayed for sale at the produce area as customers browse grocery store shelves inside Kroger Co.'s Ralphs supermarket amid fears of the global growth of coronavirus cases, in Los Angeles, California, U.S. March 15, 2020.  REUTERS/Patrick T. F

By Howard Schneider

BALTIMORE (Reuters) - The rate increases projected by Federal Reserve officials this week represented a "balancing act" between the need to begin normalizing monetary policy in the face of high inflation, while guarding against a fast tightening of credit that could damage the economy, Richmond Fed President Thomas Barkin said on Friday.

"The rate path we announced this week shouldn't drive economic decline. We are still far from the level of rates that constrains the economy," Barkin told a Maryland Bankers Association economic forum in what were his first public remarks since the U.S. central bank on Wednesday approved a quarter-percentage-point increase in the target federal funds rate.

"Think of it as an indication that the extraordinary support of the pandemic era is unwinding," Barkin said. The federal funds rate has been near zero since March of 2020.

New projections showed Fed officials at the median envision raising that rate to 1.9% by the end of this year, still below the roughly 2.4% level that policymakers feel would have a neutral impact on economic decisions.

Amid calls by some officials for faster hikes in borrowing costs, Barkin said the Fed could move more quickly, including in half-percentage-point increments, "if we start to believe that is necessary to prevent inflation expectations from unanchoring."

But he added that such a shift didn't seem to be happening so far, and in the meantime it remained uncertain how quickly some of the lingering problems from the pandemic - from supply chain troubles to the skewed demand for goods - will be resolved. Until that becomes clearer, Barkin said, it will be hard to know just how fast the Fed should raise interest rates.

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"Setting the right pace for rate increases is a balancing act - we normalize rates to contain inflation, but if we over-correct, we can negatively impact employment, which is the other part of our dual mandate. And we have some time to get to a neutral position," Barkin said.

"Inflation and employment are still being heavily influenced by pandemic-era supply and participation pressures - and more recently, the war on Ukraine - and it will take a while for us to understand and meet the dynamics of the post-pandemic economy," he added.

Latest comments

I'm not sure the fed can negatively impact employment with companies looking to fill 9 million job openings. just saying a lot of jobs looking to be filled. Bullard makes more sense.
The big lie continues……
What a load of BS. Better way to put it. We do not care about inflation or how much it hurts working people as long as the stock market keeps going up (as all the Fed Board have millions of their own wealth invested). Increasing rates by 0.25% while inflation is at 8% and will probably be at 10%+ in the next few months - disgusting
Well, you seem to know where to invest then. Cool.
 Well I know 0 chance will I be investing until the Fed gets some ****and makes the real calls it should have made 6+ months ago. Increasing rates by 0.25% when inflation is at 8% is ridiculous and shows they have one thing in mind - stock market profits (what is now 4 Fed Board having to retire early after selling shares / making millions?). Saying inflation was 'transitory' when a high school student knows - you pump $5Trillion of debt into an economy it's going to lead to inflation. The war in Ukraine is going to make inflation even worse. Q2 or Q3 reporting should finally see if companies can maintain profits without massive state handouts. The market is still 15%-20% overvalued and I won't invest until falls back to pre-covid levels (which I can see happen in the next 12 - 18 months)
Lmao
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