Advertisement
Advertisement

Fed’s Harker wants interest rates to get above 5%, then sit

By:
Reuters
Updated: Apr 11, 2023, 23:15 GMT+00:00

(Reuters) - Philadelphia Federal Reserve Bank President Patrick Harker on Tuesday held the door open to the possibility that, a year into its most rapid monetary policy tightening since the 1980s, the U.S. central bank is done raising interest rates.

Fed officials: no call yet on 50 vs 75 bps rate hike next month

By Ann Saphir

(Reuters) -Philadelphia Federal Reserve Bank President Patrick Harker on Tuesday said he feels the U.S. central bank may soon be done raising interest rates, a year into its most rapid monetary policy tightening since the 1980s.

“Since the full impact of monetary policy actions can take as much as 18 months to work its way through the economy, we will continue to look closely at available data to determine what, if any, additional actions we may need to take,” Harker said in a speech at the Wharton Initiative on Financial Policy and Regulation.

“But make no mistake: We are fully committed to bringing inflation back down to our 2% target.”

Harker joined his fellow U.S. central bankers last month in voting for a quarter of a percentage point increase in the benchmark overnight interest rate, taking it to a range of 4.75% to 5.00%.

The Fed signaled at the time that most policymakers expected one more increase before calling it quits on a rate-hike campaign that began in March 2022.

In a question-and-answer session following his speech, Harker said he was among that majority. “I’m in the camp of getting up above 5 and then sitting there for a while,” he said.

Recent inflation readings “show that disinflation is proceeding slowly – which is disappointing, to say the least,” Harker said. The Fed targets 2% inflation which, by its preferred measure, is still running at about 5%.

Still, he said, “we’re already seeing promising signs” that the Fed’s rate hikes are working, particularly to bring down house prices.

Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee earlier on Tuesday said he was focused on parsing the potential impact of tighter credit conditions on the economy in the run-up to the Fed’s May 2-3 meeting.

(Reporting by Ann Saphir; Editing by Chris Reese, Jamie Freed and Neil Fullick)

About the Author

Reuterscontributor

Reuters, the news and media division of Thomson Reuters, is the world’s largest international multimedia news provider reaching more than one billion people every day. Reuters provides trusted business, financial, national, and international news to professionals via Thomson Reuters desktops, the world's media organizations, and directly to consumers at Reuters.com and via Reuters TV. Learn more about Thomson Reuters products:

Advertisement