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The Fed Is Flying Partly Blind As It Sets A Benchmark For Global Borrowing
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) The Federal Reserve will set U.S. interest rates this week with part of its dashboard switched off. A government shutdown that began on October 1 paused most official economic releases-like the monthly jobs report-just as the Fed heads into a pivotal decision.
Compounding the blind spot, payroll giant ADP recently stopped sharing the anonymized weekly microdata the Fed used to track roughly a fifth of private-sector workers. Together, those outages turn a data-driven process into a judgement call.
What the Fed still sees is limited. September inflation was released late to meet legal obligations: consumer prices rose 0.3% on the month and 3.0% from a year earlier.
But other“hard” indicators are delayed, and weekly jobless claims aren't arriving in their usual format. Policymakers are leaning more on regional surveys, state-level signals, and conversations with businesses-the Fed 's Beige Book-useful for color, weaker for precision.
That raises the chance of moving too fast on noisy signals or too slowly as underlying conditions shift. The story behind the story is about the plumbing of modern policymaking.
U.S. Data Gaps Threaten Global Markets
Central banks don't just need independence; they need uninterrupted, credible data. The United States treats its statistical system as essential infrastructure in normal times-but shutdown rules can still turn the lights off.
Meanwhile, public–private data partnerships can vanish overnight if they rest on informal arrangements rather than durable agreements with clear guardrails. When a single private provider pulls a feed, a critical cross-check disappears.
Why this matters outside the U.S.: American rates anchor global finance. A surprise cut or hold can move currencies, borrowing costs, and asset prices from São Paulo to Seoul.
For Brazil and other emerging markets, a steadier or lower U.S. rate path eases pressure on local debt and supports capital inflows; a hawkish surprise can jolt exchange rates and tighten financial conditions in days.
The fix is straightforward, if not easy: insulate core statistics from shutdowns with multi-year funding, and formalize data-sharing rules that balance transparency, privacy, and continuity. Monetary policy will always involve uncertainty. It shouldn't involve flying blind.
Compounding the blind spot, payroll giant ADP recently stopped sharing the anonymized weekly microdata the Fed used to track roughly a fifth of private-sector workers. Together, those outages turn a data-driven process into a judgement call.
What the Fed still sees is limited. September inflation was released late to meet legal obligations: consumer prices rose 0.3% on the month and 3.0% from a year earlier.
But other“hard” indicators are delayed, and weekly jobless claims aren't arriving in their usual format. Policymakers are leaning more on regional surveys, state-level signals, and conversations with businesses-the Fed 's Beige Book-useful for color, weaker for precision.
That raises the chance of moving too fast on noisy signals or too slowly as underlying conditions shift. The story behind the story is about the plumbing of modern policymaking.
U.S. Data Gaps Threaten Global Markets
Central banks don't just need independence; they need uninterrupted, credible data. The United States treats its statistical system as essential infrastructure in normal times-but shutdown rules can still turn the lights off.
Meanwhile, public–private data partnerships can vanish overnight if they rest on informal arrangements rather than durable agreements with clear guardrails. When a single private provider pulls a feed, a critical cross-check disappears.
Why this matters outside the U.S.: American rates anchor global finance. A surprise cut or hold can move currencies, borrowing costs, and asset prices from São Paulo to Seoul.
For Brazil and other emerging markets, a steadier or lower U.S. rate path eases pressure on local debt and supports capital inflows; a hawkish surprise can jolt exchange rates and tighten financial conditions in days.
The fix is straightforward, if not easy: insulate core statistics from shutdowns with multi-year funding, and formalize data-sharing rules that balance transparency, privacy, and continuity. Monetary policy will always involve uncertainty. It shouldn't involve flying blind.
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