Fed Set to Lift Rates as ‘Soft-ish Landing’
Becomes a Harder Sell
The central bank has hoped to cool down the economy
without pushing unemployment much higher. Stubborn inflation narrows that path.
Jeanna
Smialek
By Jeanna
Smialek
June 14,
2022
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/06/14/business/economy/federal-reserve-rates-economy.html
Federal Reserve officials are meeting this week with
one major goal in mind: cooling the economy enough to slow rapid inflation.
The odds of pulling that off without plunging the
nation into a recession are growing slimmer.
As the Fed
prepares to take an aggressive stance to tamp down persistent inflation —
likely discussing raising interest rates by three-quarters of a point on
Wednesday — investors, consumers and economists increasingly expect that the
economy could tip into a downturn next year. Even researchers who think the
central bank can still pull off a “soft landing,” in which policymakers guide
the economy onto a more sustainable path without causing a spike in
unemployment and an outright contraction, acknowledge that the path toward that
optimistic outcome has become narrower.
“It was not
obvious that a soft landing was feasible,” said Michael Feroli, chief U.S.
economist at J.P. Morgan, who still thinks it could happen. “The degree of
difficulty has probably increased.”
The trouble
stems from America’s inflation data, which have been growing more worrying.
Consumer prices accelerated in May to an 8.6 percent pace, the fastest since
1981. Even after volatile food and fuel costs, which the central bank cannot do
much to control, are stripped out, inflation was firmer than expected last
month as rents, airfares and hotel room rates surged. Compounding the problem,
two recent reports showed, inflation expectations are headed higher.
The data suggest
the Fed may need to act more decisively, slowing consumer and business spending
and the job market even more, to bring prices under control.
Before last
week’s inflation report, central bankers had been expected to raise interest
rates by half a percentage point this week and then again in July. But now the
Fed is likely to discuss moving more rapidly to try to stamp out inflation
pressures before they become a permanent feature of the economic backdrop. It
could also continue to raise rates by more than the usual quarter-point
increments into September or even beyond, many economists predict.
The Fed has
already raised rates twice this year, by a quarter point in March and half a
point in May. If it takes more drastic action — making mortgages and business
loans even more expensive, choking off corporate expansion plans and crimping
the labor market — it would make higher unemployment and a shrinking economy
more likely.
For months,
the Fed has acknowledged that the path toward slower inflation was likely to be
an unpleasant one. When the central bank raises the federal funds rate, it
filters out through the economy to slow consumer and business demand,
eventually weighing on wages and prices. The way to bring inflation under
control is, essentially, to cause a little economic pain.
Still, top
policymakers have voiced consistent optimism that because America’s labor
market was starting from a solid position, it might be possible to cool down
inflation without erasing recent job market progress. With so many job openings
per unemployed worker, the logic went, it might be possible to restrain
conditions just enough to bring the supply of workers into better balance with
employer demands.
“I think we
have a good chance to have a soft or soft-ish landing,” Jerome H. Powell, the
Fed chair, said at his news conference after the central bank’s May meeting. He
added that “the economy is strong and is well positioned to handle tighter
monetary policy.”
But
somebody has to feel the pressure and stop spending for the Fed’s policy to
work — and with inflation higher and more stubborn, it will take a bigger
squeeze on demand to bring it in line.
In fact,
Mr. Feroli at J.P. Morgan said, the Fed’s economic projections — which will be
released for the first time since March after this meeting — could show a
marked slowdown in growth and an increase in the jobless rate to illustrate
that policymakers are serious about reining in the economy and controlling
prices. Joblessness is now at 3.6 percent, which is below the 4 percent level
that Fed officials believe a healthy economy can sustain over the longer run.
If the Fed
has to slow the economy drastically, it will be a challenge to do that without
causing a recession. For one thing, when unemployment spikes, recession tends
to follow. Downturns have happened when the unemployment rate rose 0.5
percentage points over its recent low on average over a three-month period — a
relationship called the Sahm Rule, after economist Claudia Sahm.
For
another, interest rates are a blunt tool and work with a lag, and the Fed may
simply overdo it.
Investors
fear a bad outcome. Stocks sank into a bear market on Monday — meaning they
have quickly dropped in value by 20 percent — as investors become nervous that
the central bank is about to spur a recession in its quest to tame inflation.
“People
think that the soft-ish landing is a dream,” said Priya Misra, head of global
rates strategy at TD Securities. “That’s the big picture.”
It’s not
just Wall Street that is increasingly glum. Consumer confidence fell to its
lowest level on record in preliminary data from the University of Michigan
survey, and expectations of higher unemployment in a New York Fed survey have
been picking up.
What is
inflation? Inflation is a loss of purchasing power over time, meaning your
dollar will not go as far tomorrow as it did today. It is typically expressed
as the annual change in prices for everyday goods and services such as food,
furniture, apparel, transportation and toys.
What causes
inflation? It can be the result of rising consumer demand. But inflation can
also rise and fall based on developments that have little to do with economic
conditions, such as limited oil production and supply chain problems.
Is
inflation bad? It depends on the circumstances. Fast price increases spell
trouble, but moderate price gains can lead to higher wages and job growth.
How does
inflation affect the poor? Inflation can be especially hard to shoulder for
poor households because they spend a bigger chunk of their budgets on
necessities like food, housing and gas.
Can
inflation affect the stock market? Rapid inflation typically spells trouble for
stocks. Financial assets in general have historically fared badly during
inflation booms, while tangible assets like houses have held their value
better.
Even if the
Fed is also becoming more uncertain about its chances of setting the economy
down gently, Mr. Powell may not say that. Coming from a top central bank
official, a prediction that the economy is headed for tough times might become
a self-fulfilling prophesy, shattering already fragile confidence.
“They went
from soft to soft-ish — I don’t think there’s another term they can use to say
‘not a complete disaster,’” Ms. Misra said. “I think the markets are calling
their bluff, that they won’t be able to achieve it.”
A recession
would spell trouble for the White House. President Biden has been sure to
emphasize that the Fed is independent and that he will respect its ability to
do what it deems necessary to bring inflation under control, even as his
approval ratings crack and as the economy heads toward a potentially tough
transition period.
“The
Federal Reserve has a primary responsibility to control inflation,” Mr. Biden
wrote in a recent opinion column. He added that “past presidents have sought to
influence its decisions inappropriately during periods of elevated inflation. I
won’t do this.”
Even so,
some have argued that the central bank should not be the only game in town when
it comes to controlling inflation, given the pain its policies inflict. Skanda
Amarnath, executive director of the employment advocacy group Employ America,
argued that the White House should be taking more aggressive actions to improve
gas supply, for instance, to try to offset inflationary pressures.
Trying to
choke those off by tamping down demand — what the Fed can do — comes at too
high a cost, he argued.
“If you are
going to rely on the Fed exclusively to solve this problem, the outlook is not
good,” he said.
But most
mainstream economists see the Fed as the key solution to inflation, much as it
was when Paul Volcker led it during the 1980s. He raised interest rates to
punishing, recession-inducing levels to bring down prices that had taken off
during the 1970s. That’s why many expect a big move on Wednesday.
A
three-quarter point move “would underscore their commitment to avoid mistakes
of the 1970s,” said Diane Swonk, chief economist at Grant Thornton. “They are
now trying to bring down inflation and keep it down in a more inflation-prone
world.”
Jeanna
Smialek writes about the Federal Reserve and the economy for The Times. She
previously covered economics at Bloomberg News.
@jeannasmialek


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