U.S. Federal Reserve foresees strong jobs and economic recovery as it slows stimulus
Faster U.S. jobs recovery could lead to speedier taper and sooner rate hikes
For the first time since COVID-19 shattered a roaring economy in the spring of 2020, the U.S. Federal Reserve — the Fed — has decided to start cutting monetary stimulus, central bank head Jerome Powell announced Wednesday.
"The pandemic recession was the deepest and the recovery has been the fastest," Powell said.
But speaking to financial reporters after the Fed's monthly meeting to discuss interest rates and the rate at which the central bank buys bonds to stimulate the economy, Powell made it clear that with such an unusual recession and a strange recovery, accurately foretelling the path of jobs and inflation is not possible.
While the central bank is not planning interest rate cuts yet, it has announced it will begin scaling back, or "tapering," its $120 billion US purchase of bonds [MDASH] a tool it has used to make borrowing cheaper.
Risk for jobs
With market commentators taking strong positions on both sides of the issue, Powell and the central bank cannot wait for a consensus.
Before the latest delta surge, the U.S. economy was cranking out a million jobs a month. Powell would like to avoid significant cuts in stimulus so as to allow that kind of jobs growth to restart. But the spectre of long-lasting inflation cannot be ignored.
"We have to make policy in a world where the two goals are in tension," he said. "It's very difficult."
Powell's solution is to play it down the middle, holding off on rate hikes to help boost job creation while being ready to stomp on the brakes if that becomes necessary.
On Friday, economists expect the U.S. to announce it has cranked out 400,000 new jobs bringing the unemployment rate down to 4.7 per cent. In Canada it's expected 50,000 jobs will have been created with unemployment falling from 6.9 to 6.7 per cent.
Inflation remains a danger
"What it boils down to is something that's common sense and that's risk management," Powell told the virtual gathering of reporters. "We need to be aware of the risk ... of significantly higher inflation."
"Wages have been moving up strongly — very strongly," he said.
One interesting note was the Fed chair's attempt to redefine "transitory," a central banking concept that implied inflation would soon come back down on its own. Like Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem before him, Powell gave the distinct impression he was no longer so willing to wait.
"Really for us, what transitory has meant is that if something is transitory it will not leave behind it, permanently or very persistently, higher inflation," he said.
Powell described an economy that was still at the mercy of the COVID-19 virus in ways that he could not have predicted only months ago.
"We have to be humble about what we know about this economy which is still very covid-affected,' said Powell, noting the resurgence in the virus over the last 90 days has been an unexpected setback.
"We were on a path to a very different place," he said. "Delta put us on a very different path."
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