US Federal Reserve Takes Swing at Inflation with Largest Rate Increase
Since 1994
The Federal Reserve took its most aggressive step yet to try
to tame rapid and persistent inflation, raising interest rates by three-quarters
of a percentage point on Wednesday and signaling that it is prepared to inflict
economic pain to get prices under control.
The rate increase was the central bank’s biggest since 1994
and could be followed by a similarly sized move next month, suggested Jerome H.
Powell, the Fed chair, underscoring just how much America’s unexpectedly stubborn
price gains are unsettling Fed officials.
As central bankers drive their policy rate rapidly higher,
it will make buying a home or expanding a business more expensive, restraining spending
and slowing the broader economy. Officials expect growth to moderate in the coming
months and years and predicted that unemployment will rise about half a percentage
point to 4.1 percent by late 2024 as their policy squeezes companies and workers.
Mr. Powell acknowledged that it was becoming increasingly
difficult for the Fed to slow inflation without causing a recession as outside forces,
including the war in Ukraine and factory shutdowns in China, threaten to curb the
supply of goods and commodities like oil. If the Fed has to quash demand to an extreme
degree in an effort to bring it into line with limited supply, it could make for
a slump that leaves businesses shuttered and people unemployed.
“We’re not trying to induce a recession right now, let’s be
clear about that,” Mr. Powell said, explaining that the Fed still wants to reduce
inflation to its 2 percent goal while keeping the labor market strong — an outcome
economists call a “soft landing.”
But “those pathways have become much more challenging due
to factors that are outside of our control,” he said, later adding that “the environment
has become more difficult, clearly, in the last four or five months.”
The latest move set the Fed’s policy rate in a range of 1.50
percent to 1.75 percent, and more rate increases are to come. Mr. Powell signaled
that the debate at the Federal Open Market Committee’s next meeting in July will
be over whether to raise rates half a point or to repeat an increase of three-quarters
of a point, though he added that he did “not expect moves of this size to be common.”
Officials expect interest rates to hit 3.4 percent by the
end of 2022, according to economic projections they released Wednesday, which would be the highest level
since 2008. They also foresee the Fed’s policy rate peaking at 3.8 percent at the
end of 2023, up from 2.8 percent when projections were last released in March.
As rates rise, policymakers anticipate that growth will slow
and joblessness will climb slightly, starting this year.
Until late last week, investors and many economists expected
the central bank to raise interest rates just half a percentage point at this week’s
meeting. The Fed had lifted rates by a quarter point in March and half a point in
May, and had signaled that it expected to continue that pace in June and July.
But central bankers have received a spate of bad news on inflation
in recent days. The Consumer
Price Index jumped 8.6 percent in May from
a year earlier, the fastest increase since late 1981. The pace was brisk even after
the stripping out of food and fuel prices.
While the Fed’s preferred price gauge — the Personal
Consumption Expenditures measure — is climbing
slightly more slowly, it remains too hot for comfort as well. And consumers are
beginning to expect faster inflation in the months and years ahead, based on surveys,
which is a worrying development. Economists think that expectations can be self-fulfilling,
causing people to ask for wage increases and accept price jumps in ways that perpetuate
high inflation.
“What we’re looking for is compelling evidence that inflationary
pressures are abating, and that inflation is moving back down,” Mr. Powell said
at his news conference Wednesday, noting that instead the inflation situation has
worsened. “We thought that strong action was warranted.”
One Fed official, the president of the Federal Reserve Bank
of Kansas City, Esther George, voted against the rate increase. Though Ms. George
has historically worried about high inflation and favored higher interest rates,
she would have preferred a half-point move in this instance.
Some analysts found the Fed’s economic projections and Mr.
Powell’s view that a soft landing may still be possible to be optimistic in light
of the more aggressive policy path the central bank has charted. Economists at Wells
Fargo announced after the Fed meeting that they expected a downturn to start midway
through next year.
“The Fed is becoming a bit more realistic about how difficult
it is going to be to lower inflation without inflicting damage on the labor market,”
said Sarah House, a senior economist at Wells Fargo. “There is that growing acknowledgment
that a soft landing is increasingly difficult — I still think they’re painting a
fairly rosy picture.”
Stock
prices have been plummeting and bond market signals
are flashing red as Wall Street traders and economists increasingly expect that
the economy may tip into a recession. On Wednesday, the S&P 500 rose 1.5 percent,
climbing after the release of the decision and Mr. Powell’s news conference, most
likely because investors had already expected the Fed to make a large move.
The economy remains strong for now, but the Fed’s actions
are beginning to have a real-world impact: Mortgage
rates have risen sharply and are helping
to cool the housing market; demand for consumer goods is showing signs
of beginning to slow as borrowing becomes more expensive; and job growth, while
robust, has begun to moderate.
While the economic path ahead may be a rocky one, the Fed’s
policymakers contend that things would be worse in the long run if they did not
act. As prices surge, worker pay is not keeping up. That means that families are
falling behind as they try to afford gas, food and rent, even in a very strong labor
market.
“You really cannot have the kind of labor market we want without
price stability,” Mr. Powell said Wednesday, explaining that what officials want
is a job market with lots of job opportunities and rising wages. “It’s not going
to happen with the levels of inflation we have.”
The White House has been emphasizing that the Fed plays the
key role in bringing down inflation, even as the Biden administration does what
it can to reduce some costs for beleaguered consumers and urges
companies to improve gas supply.
“The Federal Reserve has a primary responsibility to control
inflation,” President 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.”