Current:Home > FinanceRichmond Fed president urges caution on interest rate cuts because inflation isn’t defeated -EverVision Finance
Richmond Fed president urges caution on interest rate cuts because inflation isn’t defeated
View
Date:2025-04-25 20:55:59
WASHINGTON (AP) — The president of the Federal Reserve’s Richmond branch says he supports reducing the central bank’s key interest rate “somewhat” from its current level but isn’t yet ready for the Fed to fully take its foot off the economy’s brakes.
In an interview Thursday with The Associated Press, Tom Barkin also said the economy is showing “impressive strength,” highlighting recent solid reports on retail sales, unemployment claims, and growth in the April-June quarter, which reached a healthy 3%.
“With inflation and unemployment being so close to normal levels, it’s okay to dial back the level of restraint, somewhat,” Barkin said, referring to cuts to the Fed’s key interest rate. “I’m not yet ready to declare victory on inflation. And so I wouldn’t dial it back all the way” to a level that no longer restricts the economy, which economists refer to as “neutral.” Estimates of neutral are currently about 3% to 3.5%, much lower than the benchmark rate’s current level of 4.8%.
Barkin’s caution stands in contrast to some of his fellow Fed policymakers who have expressed more urgency about rate cuts. Fed Governor Adriana Kugler on Wednesday said she “strongly supported” the Fed’s larger-than-usual half-point rate cut last week, from a two-decade high of 5.3%, and added that she would support “additional cuts” as long as inflation continues to decline.
And Austan Goolsbee, president of the Fed’s Chicago branch, said Monday that there would likely be “many more rate cuts over the next year.”
Barkin was one of 11 Fed policymakers who voted for the Fed’s rate cut, while Governor Michelle Bowman dissented in favor of a smaller quarter-point reduction.
In the interview, Barkin said a key factor in his support was the relatively modest path of rate reductions the Fed forecast for the rest of this year and through 2025 in a set of projections it released Sept. 18. Those projections showed just two quarter-point reductions later this year and four next year, less than many investors and economists had expected.
Those projections showed a “very measured” series of rate cuts, as well as a “reasonably positive view” on the economy, Barkin said, and helped counter any perception that the Fed’s sharp rate cut this month reflected “panic” about the economy.
Barkin said inflation is likely to keep fading in the near term but he does see some risk it could prove stubborn next year. Conflict in the Middle East could push up oil prices, which would lift inflation, and lower interest rates might accelerate purchases of homes and cars, which would increase prices if supply doesn’t keep up.
“Inflation is still over target,” Barkin said. “We do need to stay attentive to that.”
Barkin said he sees the Fed cutting borrowing costs in two phases, beginning with a “recalibration” because rates are higher than needed given the drop in inflation in the past two years. Inflation has fallen sharply from a peak of 7% in 2022, according to the Fed’s preferred gauge, to about 2.2% in August.
But only if inflation continues to decline steadily next year would he support rate “normalization,” in which the Fed could cut its rate to the “neutral” level, Barkin said.
Barkin also spends considerable time discussing the economy with businesses in the Fed’s Richmond district, which includes Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, the District of Columbia and most of West Virginia. Most of his recent conversations have been reassuring, he said. While hiring has clearly slowed, so far the companies he speaks with aren’t planning job cuts.
“I push them very hard,” he said. “I have a very hard time finding anybody doing layoffs or even planning layoffs.”
“Part of it is their business is still healthy,” he added. “Why would you do layoffs if your business is still healthy? Part of it is, having been short in the pandemic, they’re reluctant to get caught short again.”
veryGood! (37229)
Related
- 2025 'Doomsday Clock': This is how close we are to self
- Fashion retailer Zara yanks ads that some found reminiscent of Israel’s war on Hamas in Gaza
- Iran executes man convicted of killing a senior cleric following months of unrest
- Hilary Duff announces she's pregnant with baby No. 4: 'Buckle up buttercups'
- Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
- Gifts for the Go-Getters, Trendsetters & People Who Are Too Busy to Tell You What They Want
- Climate talks end on a first-ever call for the world to move away from fossil fuels
- Biden says Netanyahu's government is starting to lose support and needs to change
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- DeSantis’ campaign and allied super PAC face new concerns about legal conflicts, AP sources say
Ranking
- Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
- Virginia sheriff’s office says Tesla was running on Autopilot moments before tractor-trailer crash
- Two beloved Christmas classics just joined the National Film Registry
- Five whales came to a Connecticut aquarium in 2021. Three have now died
- 'We're reborn!' Gazans express joy at returning home to north
- Are Ye and Ty Dolla $ign releasing their 'Vultures' album? What to know amid controversy
- Judge vacates murder conviction of Chicago man wrongfully imprisoned for 35 years
- Argentina devalues its currency and cuts subsidies as part of shock economic measures
Recommendation
Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
'Now you’re in London!': Watch as Alicia Keys' surprise performance stuns UK commuters
Jennifer Aniston recalls last conversation with 'Friends' co-star Matthew Perry: 'He was happy'
The pope says he wants to be buried in the Rome basilica, not in the Vatican
McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
Five whales came to a Connecticut aquarium in 2021. Three have now died
China’s Xi meets with Vietnamese prime minister on second day of visit to shore up ties
FBI to exhume woman’s body from unsolved 1969 killing in Netflix’s ‘The Keepers’