A governor of the central bank says that altering the objective would undermine the Fed's credibility.
On Monday, one of President Joe Biden's new Federal Reserve appointees stated he opposes boosting the central bank's 2% inflation objective.
Fed. spoke to Harvard University students in a speech. Raising the inflation target, according to Governor Philip Jefferson, "would harm the credibility of the central bank."
In 2012, the Fed formally set a 2% inflation target. The central bank struggled for several years to bring inflation to that target.
Yet, as a result of the pandemic, inflation has skyrocketed, with the preferred inflation measure of the central bank reaching a 7% annual rate in June before falling to 5.4% in January.
Many economists have been urging the Fed to be realistic and accept a higher target because they are concerned that the Fed will need to trigger a significant economic crisis to bring inflation back to the 2% target. They have been looking for some help from the new Biden Fed appointments like Jefferson.
Jefferson stated that shifting the target would result in greater damage.
He explained that it would "present an extra risk by raising doubts about the [Federal Open Market Committee's] commitment to stabilizing inflation at whatever level since it would give rise to the possibility that the goal could be modified opportunistically in the future."
According to him, the Fed's ability to combat economic downturns without inciting high inflation would be compromised by that reputational damage.
A better strategic approach might be to rely on more vigorous supervisory and macroprudential policies that could help reduce the likelihood of such events, he added, if the goal of a higher inflation target is to increase the central bank's ability to deal with the severe recessions that follow financial crises.
Fed Chair Jerome Powell stated in December that the bank was not considering modifying its inflation target. At some time, he added, "there may be a longer-term initiative, but that is not at all where we are."
Almost every five years, the Fed examines its monetary policy strategy. The following evaluation might begin in 2024.
At the start of Monday's trade, stocks DJIA, 0.39% SPX, 0.58% were up. The 10-year Treasury note's yield TMUBMUSD10Y, 3.921% decreased slightly to 3.91%.
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