
Powell Says Tariffs Pushed Inflation To 2.9%, But No Broader Pressures Keeping Prices High
Fed officials at that meeting also forecast that the central bank would reduce its rate twice more this year and once in 2026. Lower rates from the Fed could reduce borrowing costs for mortgages, car loans, and business loans. Powell is speaking before a meeting of the National Association of Business Economics in Philadelphia.
Powell reiterated a message he first delivered after the September meeting, when he signaled that the Fed is slightly more worried about the job market than its other congressional mandate, which is to keep prices stable. Tariffs have lifted the Fed's preferred measure of inflation to 2.9%, he said, but outside the duties there aren't“broader inflationary pressures” that will keep prices high.
Also Read | China vows to 'fight to the end' after Trump slaps 100% tariffs on imports Also Read | Will Trump meet Xi Jinping amid tariff blow? Here's what Scott Bessent says“Rising downside risks to employment have shifted our assessment of the balance of risks,” he said.
Powell also said that the central bank may soon stop shrinking its roughly $6.6 trillion balance sheet. The Fed has been allowing roughly $40 billion of Treasuries and mortgage-backed securities to mature each month without replacing them. The shift could weigh on longer-term Treasury interest rates.
Separately, Powell spent most of his speech defending the Fed's practice of buying longer-term Treasury bonds and mortgage-backed securities in 2020 and 2021, which were intended to lower longer-term interest rates and support the economy during the pandemic.
Yet those purchases have come under a torrent of criticism from Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, as well as some of the candidates floated by the Trump administration to replace Powell when his term as Chair ends next May.
Also Read | Fed Chair Jerome Powell speaks today at NABE: Time, where to watchBessent said in an extended critique published earlier this year that the huge purchases of bonds during the pandemic worsened inequality by boosting the stock market, without providing noticeable benefits to the economy.
Other critics have long argued that the Fed kept implementing the purchases for too long, keeping interest rates low even as inflation began to spike in late 2021. The Fed beginning in 2021 stopped the purchases and then sharply boosted borrowing costs to combat inflation.
“With the clarity of hindsight, we could have-and perhaps should have-stopped asset purchases sooner,” Powell said. "Our real-time decisions were intended to serve as insurance against downside risk."
Powell also said the purchases were intended to avoid a breakdown in the market for Treasury securities, which could have sent interest rates much higher.
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