JUST IN: Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell on Friday indicated that the central bank would soon begin cutting interest rates. https://t.co/ukeBHHkRh4 pic.twitter.com/FyuLJwd73I
— ABC News (@ABC) August 23, 2024
Under Powell, the Fed raised its benchmark rate to the highest level in 23 years to subdue inflation that two years ago was running at the hottest pace in more than four decades. Inflation has come down steadily, and investors now expect the Fed to start cutting rates at its next meeting in September — an expectation that essentially got Powell's endorsement Friday. “My confidence has grown that inflation is on a sustainable path back to 2%,” Powell said in his keynote speech at the Fed’s annual economic conference in Jackson Hole. He noted that inflation, according to the Fed's preferred gauge, had fallen to [a 12-month rate of] 2.5% last from a peak of 7.1% two years ago. Measured by the better known consumer price index, inflation has dropped from a peak 9.1% in mid-2022 to 2.9% last month. Both are edging closer to the Fed's 2% target. Powell sounded confident that the Fed would achieve a so-called soft landing — containing inflation without causing a recession. "There is good reason to think that the economy will get back to 2% inflation while maintaining a strong labor market,'' he said.I still think a goal of 2% inflation is arbitrary and off-base, given that (as I've mentioned before) the US economy grew plenty of jobs and output with inflation of 3-4% throughout the 1980s and 1990s. But regardless, inflation has cooled off after the
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