By Nick Timiraos
JACKSON HOLE, Wyo. -- Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell cautioned that past interest-rate increases had yet to fully slow the economy, an argument for holding rates steady for now, even though stronger and sustained growth could require higher rates to keep inflation declining.
"Given how far we have come, at coming meetings we are in a position to proceed carefully," Powell said in a heavily anticipated address at the Kansas City Fed's annual symposium in Wyoming's Grand Teton National Park. "We will proceed carefully as we decide whether to tighten further or, instead, to hold the policy rate constant and await further data."
Fed officials lifted their benchmark federal-funds rate last month by a quarter-percentage-point to a range between 5.25% and 5.5%, a 22-year high, continuing the most rapid series of increases in four decades. Their next meeting is Sept. 19-20.
Powell's speech illustrated how he is trying to thread the needle between slowing hiring, investment and spending to bring down inflation without providing so much restraint as to create a needlessly severe economic slowdown.
In June, most officials thought they would raise rates to a range between 5.5% and 5.75% this year, implying one more quarter-point increase later this year. Powell didn't tip his hand on whether the Fed would need to follow through on another rate increase, highlighting instead how coming economic data would inform that decision.
Inflation has slowed in the two months since officials made those projections, but economic activity has shown surprising strength.
Inflation has retreated from a 40-year high last summer, with the consumer-price index climbing 3.2% in July from a year earlier. That is well below the recent peak rate of 9.1% in June 2022.
Core prices, which exclude volatile food and energy categories, increased just 0.2% in both June and July, extending a broader slowdown in price pressures.
"Two months of good data are only the beginning of what it will take to build confidence that inflation is moving down sustainably toward our goal," Powell said. "There is substantial further ground to cover."
Some officials are uneasy about raising rates further because they expect past increases will continue to slow the economy by making it more expensive and harder for companies and individuals to borrow. Others worry that if the Fed holds rates steady, strong economic growth could cause inflation to decline more slowly than anticipated.
Powell nodded to both concerns in his remarks. He said financial conditions, including lending standards and borrowing rates, have tightened broadly in a way that typically slows down economic activity, "and there is evidence of that in this cycle as well."
"But we are attentive to signs that the economy may not be cooling as expected," he said. Fed officials have been clear that they see inflation declining further because they expect the economy to grow below its long-run trend of around 2% over the coming year. "Additional evidence of persistently above-trend growth could put further progress on inflation at risk and could warrant further tightening of monetary policy," Powell said.
Last year, Powell delivered an unusually brief address that promised to bring down inflation even at the cost of a recession. The speech jolted investors out of thinking the Fed saw a shorter and painless path to fighting inflation.
Powell echoed some of those themes in a more nuanced speech on Friday. He explicitly rejected any idea that the Fed would change its 2% inflation target.
He also acknowledged uncertainty about just how high rates needed to rise to provide enough economic restraint. Inflation-adjusted interest rates have risen to historically high levels, putting them "well above mainstream estimates" of the so-called neutral rate that neither spurs nor slows economic activity, Powell said. "But we cannot identify with certainty the neutral rate of interest, and thus there is always uncertainty about the precise level of monetary policy restraint."
尼克·蒂米劳斯著
怀俄明州杰克逊霍尔美联储主席杰罗姆·鲍威尔警告说,过去的加息尚未完全减缓经济增长,这是目前保持利率稳定的理由,尽管更强劲和持续的增长可能需要更高的利率来保持通胀下降。
鲍威尔在怀俄明州大提顿国家公园举行的堪萨斯城联邦储备银行年度研讨会上发表了备受期待的讲话,他说:考虑到我们已经走了这么远,在即将到来的会议上,我们能够谨慎行事。“我们将谨慎行事,以决定是进一步收紧货币政策,还是维持政策利率不变,等待进一步的数据。”
美联储官员上个月将基准联邦基金利率上调了0.25个百分点,至5.25%至5.5%的区间,为22年来的最高水平,延续了40年来最快的一系列加息。他们的下一次会面将于9月1日举行。19-20。
鲍威尔的讲话表明,他正试图在放缓招聘、投资和支出之间穿针引线,以在不提供太多限制的情况下压低通胀,从而造成不必要的严重经济放缓。
今年6月,大多数官员认为他们将在今年将利率上调至5.5%至5.75%之间,这意味着今年晚些时候将再加息25个基点。鲍威尔没有透露美联储是否需要继续加息,而是强调即将到来的经济数据将如何影响这一决定。
在官员做出这些预测后的两个月里,通货膨胀有所放缓,但经济活动显示出了令人惊讶的强劲势头。
通货膨胀率已从去年夏天的40年高位回落,7月份消费者价格指数同比上涨3.2%。这远低于2022年6月9.1%的近期峰值。
不包括波动较大的食品和能源类别的核心价格在6月和7月仅上涨0.2%,延续了价格压力普遍放缓的趋势。
鲍威尔说:“两个月的良好数据仅仅是建立信心的开始,相信通胀正朝着我们的目标可持续地向下移动。”“还有相当多的领域需要涉足。”
一些官员对进一步加息感到不安,因为他们预计,过去的加息将使企业和个人的借贷成本更高,更难借到钱,从而继续减缓经济增长。其他人担心,如果美联储维持利率不变,强劲的经济增长可能会导致通胀下降的速度慢于预期。
鲍威尔在讲话中对这两个问题都点头回应。他说,包括贷款标准和借贷利率在内的金融状况普遍收紧,通常会减缓经济活动,“在这个周期中也有证据表明这一点。”
“但我们注意到经济可能没有像预期的那样降温的迹象,”他说。美联储官员一直明确表示,他们认为通货膨胀率将进一步下降,因为他们预计未来一年经济增速将低于2%左右的长期趋势。鲍威尔说:“持续高于趋势的增长的更多证据可能会使通胀方面的进一步进展面临风险,并可能需要进一步收紧货币政策。”
去年,鲍威尔发表了一次不同寻常的简短演讲,承诺即使以经济衰退为代价也要降低通胀。这一讲话让投资者不再认为美联储看到了一条更短、更轻松的抗击通胀的道路。
鲍威尔在周五的一次更微妙的演讲中呼应了其中一些主题。他明确驳斥了任何有关美联储将改变2%通胀目标的想法。
他还承认,对于利率需要上升到多高才能提供足够的经济抑制,他存在不确定性。鲍威尔说,经通胀调整后的利率已升至历史高位,这使得利率“远高于”所谓的中性利率,中性利率既不会刺激也不会减缓经济活动。“但我们不能确定中性利率,因此货币政策约束的确切水平始终存在不确定性。”