NEW YORK: The Fed should slow its pace of policy normalisation to help re-align price expectations around 2 per cent and maintain the credibility of its inflation target, Federal Reserve Bank of St.
Louis President James Bullard said Tuesday in Tokyo.Inflation expectations in the US remain somewhat low, suggesting that further normalisation may not be necessary to keep inflation near target, Bullard said in prepared remarks for a seminar.
A reasonable policy going forward may be to temper the pace of normalisation.He also said that raising rates aggressively risked inverting the yield curve, an outcome that markets could interpret as signalling an impending economic downturn.His comments come ahead of a likely rate increase at the Federal Open Market Committees meeting in June.Bullard, who isnt currently a voting member of the policy-setting committee, said continued low inflation expectations could inhibit the Feds ability to maintain the credibility of its 2 per cent target.He repeated his stance that the central bank should avoid raising interest rates at a pace that pushes up short-term rates above longer-term rates.
Historically such a development has often preceded an economic downturn, especially in the US, he said, adding that he became a convert on this issue after he got its implications wrong in 2000 and 2006.Dallas Fed President Robert Kaplan and Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic have also expressed concern over a possible flipping of the yield curve.It is unnecessary for the FOMC to be so aggressive as to invert the yield curve, Bullard said.The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) is likely to raise rates soon if the economy performs as expected, according to the minutes of the panels May 1-2 meeting released last week.
Investors expect a hike in June, though the outlook for increases in the second half of the year is less certain.The FOMC has raised interest rates six times since it began the current hiking cycle in December 2015.
In March forecasts, the committee was split on whether to lift rates two or three additional times this year amid an improving economic outlook and rising inflation.
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