Federal Reserve Chairman
Jerome Powell
said the central bank was moving rapidly to combat inflation that is running at a 40-year high, speaking in a Tuesday interview.
“We have both the tools and the resolve to get inflation back down,” Mr. Powell said during an appearance at The Wall Street Journal’s Future of Everything Festival, adding that the Fed is tightly focused on the task. The central bank is raising interest rates as part of its most aggressive effort in decades to curb upward price pressures.
“We need to see inflation coming down in a convincing way,” Mr. Powell said. “Until we do, we’ll keep going.”
Mr. Powell said he remains confident that the U.S. central bank can raise rates and deal with inflation without sending the economy into recession, but he also noted it will be a challenging task.
“There could be some pain involved in restoring price stability,” he said. “You would still have quite a strong labor market…if unemployment were to move up a few ticks.”
Mr. Powell also said that the Fed remains on track to consider raising rates by half a percentage point at each of the central bank’s next two meetings, in June and July. “If the economy performs about as we expect, then that’s something that will be on the table,” Mr. Powell said. Until this month, the Fed hadn’t raised rates in such intervals since 2000.
The central bank chief and his colleagues have raised interest rates twice this year to a range between 0.75% and 1%. Mr. Powell added Tuesday that the Fed would “keep pushing” until inflation pressures moderate.
The Fed chairman has outlined his hope that the central bank can curtail high inflation without spurring a large rise in unemployment.
“The economy is strong,” Mr. Powell said, referencing strong U.S. retail-sales figures released earlier in the day. “We think it is well positioned to withstand less accommodative monetary policy.”
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Fed officials described higher inflation a year ago as temporary. They backed away from that characterization last fall, as the labor market healed rapidly and price pressures broadened to a range of goods and, more important, labor-intensive services.
Still, the Fed as recently as January had expected inflation to diminish this spring as supply-chain bottlenecks improved. So far that hasn’t happened. Meanwhile, the labor market has become exceptionally tight, with nearly two job openings for every unemployed worker looking for a job in March.
The war in Ukraine and renewed lockdowns in China to deal with a Covid-19 surge have ended any expectation of near-term relief, prompting many Fed officials to call for a faster pace of rate rises this spring and summer.
The Fed is still counting on inflation falling later this year as supply-chain disruptions ease and more workers return to labor markets. But unlike last year, Fed leaders have said the central bank could no longer set near-term policy by forecasting that such relief would materialize.
Investors have been focused on the near-term pace of rate increases, with financial markets reacting to Fed policy, U.S. inflation, the Russia-Ukraine war and China’s economic slowdown.
The Fed’s stopping point for rate increases is shrouded in uncertainty. If inflation doesn’t soon show signs of diminishing, more officials could conclude rates will need to rise closer to 4% over the next 12 to 18 months rather than to a level around 3% that most of them projected at their policy meeting two months ago.
The most recent inflation data has been mixed. On a monthly basis, the consumer-price index’s gauge of core prices, which excludes food and energy, rose a seasonally adjusted 0.6% in April, according to a Labor Department report last week, and rose 6.2% over the previous 12 months.
The Fed uses a different gauge, the personal-consumption expenditures price index. April inflation data from that Commerce Department report will be released on May 27. Based on other recently released figures, Wall Street forecasters estimate a more muted rise in inflation using that measure.
Economists at Morgan Stanley think core PCE inflation rose by less than 0.3% in April, bringing the 12-month rate of change to 4.8%, from 5.2% in March.
Mr. Powell said that he sees financial markets navigating the Fed’s tightening cycle. “There are some volatile days involved in markets, but so far, I see us as getting through this fairly well,” Mr. Powell said.
Write to Nick Timiraos at [email protected] and Michael S. Derby at [email protected]
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