Fed's Waller says higher rates possibly needed in 'near term'
Federal Reserve Governor Christopher Waller signalled that interest rates may need to rise in the near term if inflation remains elevated. He warned that broadening price pressures and a potential surge in energy costs could delay progress toward ...

Waller, in remarks prepared for delivery to the New York Association for Business Economics, said the direction will be determined by new information starting with a consumer inflation report on Tuesday, and the Fed is at a point where it should not be "lackadaisical" if the data break in the wrong direction. He spoke amid the resumption of military conflict between the U.S. and Iran, which could push oil prices higher again and remove one of the factors that had been seemingly on the brink of helping lower costs.
"There is still a credible case for inflation to begin to fall back to our 2% goal with policy at its current setting. But I am concerned about the equally plausible case that data in the coming weeks will show that inflation will remain at its elevated level or even trend higher, requiring tighter monetary policy in the near term," Waller said.
In particular, he said he is worried that recent inflation reports have shown price pressures seeming to broaden throughout the economy, beyond the influence of last year's import tariff increases or the recent jump in energy costs and potentially reflecting more systemic inflation that would require tighter monetary policy. While the situation is not comparable to the breakout of price increases that followed the COVID-19 pandemic, with the labor market not as tight, for example, Waller said the Fed has the benefit of anchored inflation expectations - an advantage the policy-setting Federal Open Market Committee should not squander by waiting too long to raise rates if inflation persists.
"I don't take the inflationary signals I have discussed today lightly. If we get another hot reading on core inflation this week, then the FOMC will need to consider tightening monetary policy in the near term," Waller said. He added that it would take "several months of lower readings to feel that inflation is moving in the right direction."
While Waller said he does not want to raise rates prematurely and risk a recession, he regards the job market as stable and feels the Fed needs to avoid making the mistake of several years ago by waiting too long to respond to rising price pressures. The Fed held interest rates steady at its June 16-17 meeting, with policymakers evenly divided at that point over the likely need for a rate increase this year.
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