Fed announces another three-quarter-point
increase in interest rates
The move is intended to curb inflation though previous
increases this year have had little effect so far
Dominic
Rushe
@dominicru
Wed 27 Jul
2022 20.35 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2022/jul/27/fed-increase-interest-rates-inflation
With the US
economy teetering on the edge of a recession and inflation running at a
four-decade high, the Federal Reserve announced another three-quarter of a
percentage point increase in its benchmark interest rates on Wednesday, the
second such increase in just over a month.
In a
statement, the Fed said it was “highly attentive to inflation risks”.
“Recent
indicators of spending and production have softened. Nonetheless, job gains
have been robust in recent months, and the unemployment rate has remained low.
Inflation remains elevated, reflecting supply and demand imbalances related to
the pandemic, higher food and energy prices, and broader price pressures,” the
Fed said.
The central
bank added that Russia’s war against Ukraine is “causing tremendous human and
economic hardship” as well as “additional upward pressure on inflation” and
weighing on global economic activity.
The US central
bank is aggressively raising rates at levels unseen since the mid-1990s as it
struggles to tamp down soaring prices, which rose by an annual rate of 9.1% in
June, the fastest inflation rate since 1981.
The hike
raises the Fed’s cost of borrowing to between 2.25% and 2.5% and is the Fed’s
fourth rate increase this year. It comes as central banks worldwide seek to
calm price rises with higher rates. Fed chair Jerome Powell indicated that
there would be more outsized increases ahead if inflation is not brought under
control.
Powell said
he did not believe the US was currently in a recession but that the Fed needed
to slow growth in order to control inflation.
“We are not
trying to have a recession and we don’t think we have to,” said Powell. “We
think there’s a path for us to bring inflation down while sustaining a strong
labor market.” But he said he expected the jobs market to soften in reaction to
the Fed’s moves and that it was essential for inflation to be tamed. “Price
stability is what makes the whole economy work,” said Powell.
So far the
rate rises appear to have done little to rein in rising prices and the costs of
everything from food and rent to gas remain high. The Fed will not meet again
until September, at which point more economic data will be available, and its
decision committee should be better able to see if its policy is working.
One
important measure of the economy will be made public on Thursday, when the
commerce department releases its latest survey of gross domestic product (GDP)
– a broad measure of the cost of a wide range of goods and services across the
US economy. Many economists are expecting growth to have slowed for the second
quarter in a row – a guide used by many to declare a recession.
Recessions
are, however, officially declared by the National Bureau of Economic Research
(NBER), a research group that uses a broad range of measures including jobs
growth to decide when the US economy is shrinking. The NBER often makes its
announcement well after a recession has begun, as it assesses other economic
factors.
Jobs growth
remains strong – the US added 372,000 jobs in June and the unemployment rate
stayed low at 3.6%.
But, for
many, two months of declining GDP is a strong indicator that the economy is in
a recession. Michael Strain, director of economic policy studies and senior
fellow at the right-leaning American Enterprise Institute, pointed out this
week that all of the last 10 recessions in the US have been preceded by two
consecutive quarters of negative economic growth.
With
midterm elections approaching and the Biden administration facing a tough fight
to retain control of Congress, the economy has become the central battleground.
Republicans
have seized on the confusing economic data to blame the Biden administration
for the slowdown, accusing the Democrats of “redefining recession and
downplaying the red flags in the economy” in an “attempt to deny the cruel
economy they’ve created”.
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