Slamming on the brakes’: economists react to the
Federal Reserve’s rate hike
Some economists say it will take an economic
contraction and higher unemployment to bring inflation down
Edward
Helmore
Wed 15 Jun
2022 21.01 BST
The Federal
Reserve raised interest rates by the largest hike in 28 years on Wednesday as
it fights to drag down runaway inflation – and now economists are weighing
whether it’s sufficient to cool the economy without crushing economic growth
and slamming the economy into recession.
“We’re not
trying to induce a recession,” the Fed chair, Jerome Powell, said in comments
after the rate hike was confirmed. But Powell made clear that some economic
forces behind the 40-year inflation high are out of the Fed’s control. Jumps in
commodity prices, he said, could “take the decision out of our hands”.
An
increasing number of economists say it will take an economic contraction and
higher unemployment to bring inflation down to tolerable levels, even if that
does not bring inflation back to the Fed’s 2% inflation target.
Here’s what they are saying:
Larry
Summers, former US treasury secretary
I’m glad
that the Fed appears to be stepping up with respect to inflation risks. It’s a
step in the right direction. We are likely to have a recession. We have
overheated the economy and gotten some bad luck. When the pendulum swings too
far one way, it tends to swing back.
Michael
Pearce, senior US economist at Capital Economics
With
inflation set to remain uncomfortably high, our sense is that officials will
follow that up with another 75bp [basis point] hike in July, with rates rising
rapidly to 3.5% by the end of this year, and a peak of 4% early next year.
This is no
longer the “immaculate disinflation” scenario presented in the March forecasts
to widespread criticism. But still, most of the deceleration in core inflation
in Fed officials’ forecasts is presumably coming from easing supply
constraints.
Mark
Carney, the former governor of the Bank of England (to Bloomberg)
Central
bankers need to catch up to their economies. They’ve been behind the curve,
they’ve acknowledged this. They need to start to get interest rates above
inflation effectively, or at least inflation expectations.
Alan
Blinder, former US central bank policymaker
The
chairman of the Fed doesn’t want to let the “r” word slip out of his mouth in a
positive way, that we need a recession. But there are a lot of euphemisms and
he’ll use them.
Mark
Hamrick, senior economic analyst at Bankrate
[The Fed
is] walking a monetary policy tightrope hoping to avoid a recession while
dampening demand.
Victoria
Greene, chief investment officer at G Squared Private Wealth
There’s no
way they can slam on the brakes with inflation without slamming on the brakes
economically speaking. It’s funny we still have recession deniers.

.jpg)
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário