Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell on Friday signaled that the central bank may start pulling back some of its historic support for the economy later this year, striking an upbeat tone even as the resurgent coronavirus and labor market troubles loom.
The speech at the annual Jackson Hole conference in Wyoming could be Powell’s last big test before President Joe Biden decides whether to reappoint him to the government’s most powerful economic post. His main task was not to rattle investors — and rankle the White House — with any suggestion that the Fed would abruptly exit from a policy that has bolstered the economy throughout the pandemic. He succeeded: Stocks jumped as Powell said the Fed would move deliberately.
The Fed chief suggested that before the central bank dials back its $120 billion in monthly purchases of U.S. government debt and mortgage-backed securities, it wants to see stronger job growth, and that it's watching for signs that the Delta variant of the coronavirus might hurt the labor market. But he said the economy was moving in the right direction.
“With vaccinations rising, schools reopening, and enhanced unemployment benefits ending, some factors that may be holding back job seekers are likely fading,” Powell said. “While the Delta variant presents a near-term risk, the prospects are good for continued progress toward maximum employment.”
Powell made clear that even if the Fed begins to slow its asset purchases, that doesn’t mean it’s close to raising interest rates, saying there was “much ground to cover” in the labor market recovery.
“It’s best for Fed policy for him to be as forthright as possible without scaring anyone, which also happens to be what’s best for him politically,” said Diane Swonk, chief economist at Grant Thornton, said before the speech.
Biden’s presidency is riding on his pledge to both defeat the virus and restore the economy to its pre-pandemic strength, and Powell has provided crucial backup for the president in both his words and multitrillion-dollar infusion of aid to the markets. Any misstep at the conference — which has served as the venue for some of the Fed’s most sweeping policy changes in the past — would have come at a particularly sensitive moment for the Fed chair, with the decision on whether to reappoint him expected to be announced as early as next month.
The bond-buying process is designed to lower long-term interest rates, making it cheaper to borrow and encouraging investors to take more risks, which ideally boosts overall growth.
Powell has faced criticism from some progressive groups, who have been vocal in pushing the central bank to not move aggressively to remove support before the benefits of the recovery have been felt more broadly. The Fed Up Campaign, a coalition of labor and community groups, argues that it's too soon to start pulling back on, or “tapering,” its purchases this year.
“Why are we talking about the Fed ‘tapering’ and ‘substantial progress’ when working people are only starting to feel the economy get better?” the group said in a statement.
Fed Up said Powell needed to be more specific about how the program would improve the economy for lower-income workers, particularly minorities, who have been hurt by the central bank’s policies in the past, including by raising interest rates too early to head off inflation.
“The Fed badly undershot with its efforts before the COVID crisis, especially with the 2015 rate hike,” the group said. “They’ve acknowledged that. Powell needs to say how they will make up for the scale of that mistake going forward.”
Senior White House economic officials, who emphasize the importance of the Fed’s independence, nevertheless would also like to see the central bank move cautiously and slowly in paring back its asset purchases.
But there’s also pressure on the Fed to slow down its economic stimulus from Republicans as well as from Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.), as inflation has spiked in recent months due to pandemic-induced shortages and as asset prices for houses and stocks have continued to soar.
But Powell is unlikely to get a furious response as he once did from President Donald Trump. After the Jackson Hole conference in 2019, Trump — frustrated that the Fed was not moving faster to cut interest rates — tweeted: “Who is our bigger enemy, Jay Powell or [Chinese President] Xi [Jinping]?”
Biden has adopted a hands-off approach, saying last month that the Fed “should take whatever steps it deems necessary to support a strong, durable economic recovery,” while some administration officials have privately praised the job Powell has done. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has indicated to senior White House officials that she believes Powell deserves renomination to a second term, according to two people familiar with the matter.
With both prices and job gains picking up, the central bank has been gradually getting firmer in signaling that it will begin slowing its asset purchases sometime later this year. It’s something investors have largely taken in stride, in contrast to the so-called taper tantrum in 2013, when markets panicked after then-Chair Ben Bernanke suggested plans for a gradual reduction in the Fed’s financial crisis-era asset purchases, before quickly backtracking.
Ellen Zentner, chief U.S. economist for Morgan Stanley, said Powell’s main job in the speech was not catch investors off guard in any suggestions about how much it will pull back on its bond purchases and how quickly.
“You don’t want to rock the boat when market expectations are right where you need them to be,” she said.
For now, Powell could only go so far in committing to a particular course of action while the pandemic remains prevalent. The central bank would like to see more progress in the labor market — in line with the last few strong monthly jobs reports — but there might be fewer workers available to take jobs in the fall if schools don’t reopen fully, forcing more parents to stay home.
“The intervening month [since July] has brought more progress in the form of a strong employment report for July, but also the further spread of the Delta variant,” Powell said. “We will be carefully assessing incoming data and the evolving risks.”
Ben White contributed to this report.
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