US Fed set to raise interest rates for first time
since 2018 amid soaring inflation
Federal Reserve expected to follow other central banks
and raise rates by a quarter percentage point
Dominic
Rushe in New York
@dominicru
Wed 16 Mar
2022 05.00 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2022/mar/16/us-federal-reserve-interest-rates-inflation
The Federal
Reserve is expected to raise interest rates for the first time since 2018 as it
struggles with soaring US inflation, the impact of the war in Ukraine, and the
continuing coronavirus crisis.
The Fed has
a dual mandate – to maximize employment and keep prices under control. The job
market and the wider economy have made an impressive recovery from the lows of
the pandemic, thanks in part to Fed rate cuts and a massive stimulus program,
but prices have increased by 7.9% in the year through February – the highest
rate of inflation in 40 years.
With
inflation now rising around the world, the Fed is expected to announce it will
follow other central banks, including the Bank of England, and raise rates by a
quarter percentage point.
The Fed
chair, Jerome Powell, will also hold a Wednesday press conference, where he
will be asked about the central bank’s plans for future rises.
Supply
chain issues have led to sharp increases in a variety of areas including used
cars, food and utilities that are causing particular hardship for lower-income
Americans.
The Fed
initially dismissed rising prices as “transitory”, but has since acknowledged
high inflation is likely to be around for some time. Supply problems that
appeared to be normalizing earlier this year are also now feeling the impact of
the war in Ukraine and face further setbacks as China imposes new lockdowns to
curb new coronavirus outbreaks.
Raising
rates too quickly threatens to push the US into recession. This week, CNBC’s
Fed Survey – which gauges the opinions of fund managers, strategists and
economists – put the probability of recession in the US at 33% in the next 12
months, up 10 percentage points from the 1 February survey. The latest survey
put the chance of a recession in Europe at 50%.
With
inflation running at close to four times the Fed’s target rate of 2%, Powell
has made clear that the central bank will raise rates in an attempt to curb
rising prices. But some economists question how much impact the Fed can have on
such a complex issue.
JW Mason,
associate professor of economics at John Jay College, said a quarter-point rate
rise was unlikely to have much impact on inflation or the wider economy. “It is
a strange feature of the way we think and talk about economics today that we
have given this wildly outsized importance to this one policy tool used by this
one part of government,” he said.
Mason said
he expected inflation would ease without the Fed’s intervention over the next
year – albeit “less than we hoped it would”. He pointed out that car prices –
until recently the largest source of inflation – were already falling. While he
said a series of small rate rises were not likely to have a major impact
overall “a sufficiently large rise in interest rates will have a substantial
negative effect on real economic activity”.
Mason said
other branches of government were better able to deal with price issues in the
broader economy, such as soaring rents and home prices or gas and utility
bills, and that tools such as price caps or stimulus cheques could be used to
alleviate hardship.
Testifying
to Congress early this month, Powell made clear was prepared to raise rates in
larger half-percentage-point increments should price increases not slow down.
But he also
acknowledged the economic outlook had been made more complicated by the war in
Ukraine.
The
conflict “is a gamechanger and will be with us for a very long time”, Powell
told the House of Representatives financial services committee. “There are
events yet to come … and we don’t know what the real effect on the US economy
will be. We don’t know whether those effects will be quite lasting or not.”
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