Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen sees a number of encouraging signs that the economy is reviving after a brutal winter and says if the improvements stay on track, the Fed will likely start raising interest rates later this year.
Delivering the Fed’s mid-year economic outlook to Congress, Yellen says the importance of the first rate hike should not be over-emphasized because interest rates are likely to remain at very low levels “for quite some time after the first increase.” The Fed’s benchmark rate has been at a record low near zero since December 2008, meaning that borrowing rates for consumers and businesses have been at historic lows.
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Many economists believe the Fed’s first rate hike will occur in September, but they see at most only two quarter-point moves this year.
“If the economy evolves as we expect, economic conditions likely would make it appropriate at some point this year to raise the federal funds target,” Yellen said in prepared remarks. The funds rate, the Fed’s key policy lever, has not been lifted in nearly a decade.
Yellen stressed that her outlook is based on the expectation that the labour market will continue to improve and inflation will begin to move closer to the Fed’s 2% target for annual price gains. Inflation is currently running lower than the pace the Fed believes is optimal for a healthy economy,
A decision to raise rates, Yellen said, “will signal how much progress the economy has made in healing from the trauma of the financial crisis.”
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Anticipating tough questions from Republican lawmakers over the Fed’s powers and what critics see as excessive secrecy, Yellen described a number of steps the central bank has taken in recent years to become more transparent. She said the Fed holds press conferences after four of its eight meetings each year and has increased the frequency that it updates its economic forecasts.
“The Federal Reserve ranks among the most transparent central banks,” Yellen said.
But she added that efforts to increase openness “no matter how well intentioned must avoid unintended consequences” that could undermine the Fed’s ability to conduct policy.
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The Fed, responding to the 2008 financial crisis and the worst economic downturn in seven decades, expanded its balance sheet by purchasing trillions of dollars in bonds and took other aggressive actions to lower interest rates and battle high unemployment.
The moves triggered criticism that the Fed has become too powerful and is too secretive and unaccountable. Lawmakers in both the House and Senate have introduced legislation to rein in the Fed’s independence, measures that the central bank have warned could damage the independence the Fed needs to maintain its credibility with financial markets.