Naharnet

U.S. Fed Vice Chair Says Rate Hike 'Expectation, Not Commitment'

The U.S. Federal Reserve's plan to raise interest rates by the end of the year is not guaranteed, although it remains the expected course of action, the central bank's vice chairman said Sunday.

Last month, the Fed said it plans to raise rates later in 2015, assuming further improvement in the U.S. labor market and continued economic growth.

Citing "disappointing" jobs reports and slowing global economic growth, vice chairman Stanley Fischer said Sunday those rate-hike plans are an "expectation, not a commitment."

"Both the timing of the first rate increase and any subsequent adjustments to the federal funds rate target will depend critically on future developments in the economy."

He said it was "conceivable that inflation may rise more slowly or rapidly than we currently anticipate," which would cause the Fed to tweak its plans.

In his comments, on the sidelines of the International Monetary Fund's annual meeting in Lima, Peru, Fischer noted that the U.S. economy continues to grow at a "moderate pace" and that the unemployment rate has continued to decline.

But he noted that both nominal and real wage growth "have remained subdued," hiring has slowed over the past two months, and inflation remains "well below" the two percent goal.

"We cannot be certain about the pace at which the headwinds still restraining the domestic economy will continue to fade," he said.

He also acknowledged that modifying expectations on rate increases could exacerbate market volatility and itself contribute to that lack of certainty, and that many officials, including some at the IMF meeting, "want us 'to just do it.'" 

Despite what he called a "roller coaster ride" over the past few weeks, Atlanta Fed president Dennis Lockhart, a voting member of the Fed's Federal Open Market Committee policy arm, said Friday he still expected rates to rise this month or in December.

Also Friday, New York Fed president and FOMC voting member William Dudley said that a rate hike was "possible in October."

The FOMC, which decides when rate hikes are appropriate, has two meetings left this year, on October 27-28 and December 16-17.

Source: Agence France Presse


Copyright © 2012 Naharnet.com. All Rights Reserved. https://www.naharnet.com/stories/en/191760