Federal Reserve Bank President Pushes for Faster Rate Hikes — Says the Fed Risks Losing Credibility on Inflation Target
Publikováno: 21.3.2022
The president of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, James Bullard, has called for more aggressive measures to combat inflation and reduce the size of the Fed’s balance sheet. “The burden of excessive inflation is particularly heavy for people with modest incomes and wealth and for those with limited ability to adjust to a […]
The president of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, James Bullard, has called for more aggressive measures to combat inflation and reduce the size of the Fed’s balance sheet. “The burden of excessive inflation is particularly heavy for people with modest incomes and wealth and for those with limited ability to adjust to a rising cost of living,” he stressed.
Fed’s Bullard Pushes for More Aggressive Rate Hikes to Better Manage Economic Situation
St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank President James Bullard issued a statement Friday regarding his dissenting vote at last week’s Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting.
At the meeting, the FOMC decided to “raise the target range for the federal funds rate by 25 basis points to 0.25% – 0.50%,” Bullard explained, adding:
In my view, raising the target range to 0.50% – 0.75% and implementing a plan for reducing the size of the Fed’s balance sheet would have been more appropriate actions.
Bullard is an economist who has been the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis since 2008. He reiterated that in his judgment, “a 50-basis-point upward adjustment to the policy rate would have been a better decision for this meeting.”
He explained that the FOMC “has a mandate to provide stable prices for the U.S. economy and a 2% inflation target stated in terms of headline PCE (personal consumption expenditures price index) inflation.”
Noting that “Headline PCE inflation measured from one year earlier is currently 6.1%, and the associated core PCE inflation rate, which ignores food and energy components, stands at 5.2%,” the St. Louis Fed president stated: “The committee is missing its target by 410 basis points on the headline measure and 320 basis points on the core measure.” He opined:
The burden of excessive inflation is particularly heavy for people with modest incomes and wealth and for those with limited ability to adjust to a rising cost of living.
“The committee’s policy rate is currently far too low to prudently manage the U.S. macroeconomic situation … U.S. monetary policy has been unwittingly easing further because inflation has risen sharply while the policy rate has remained very low, pushing short-term real interest rates lower,” Bullard detailed, emphasizing:
The committee will have to move quickly to address this situation or risk losing credibility on its inflation target.
Bullard further said:
I recommended that the committee try to achieve a level of the policy rate above 3% this year. This would quickly adjust the policy rate to a more appropriate level for the current circumstances.
Ten FOMC members projected a fed funds rate of 1.75%-2% by year’s end, according to the projections they submitted in conjunction with the meeting last week. However, eight said that it should be higher, with the highest prediction indicating a range of 3%-3.25%.
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