Five Things to Know About the Fed Raising Interest Rates

Since 2008, the Federal Reserve has been giving banks virtually free money by keeping their short-term borrowing rates near zero.
Five Things to Know About the Fed Raising Interest Rates
The Federal Reserve Building on Constitution Avenue in Washington on March 27, 2009. AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite
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Since 2008, the Federal Reserve has been giving banks virtually free money by keeping their short-term borrowing rates near zero.

This week, Fed Chair Janet Yellen indicated the Fed is getting even more optimistic about the economy and inflation and further indicated it could end that policy as early as July. The Fed will likely act by gradually raising the federal funds rate—the rate banks pay to borrow ready money overnight.

Higher borrowing rates for banks can cause stock prices to tumble, mortgage rates to jump, and jobs tougher to find—but not always.

Here are five things you need to know about higher rates from the Fed.

1. Mortgage rates are not likely to change much.

When Alan Greenspan increased the Fed funds rate in 1994 and 1995, inflation fears also pushed up yields on 20- and 30-year Treasury securities and mortgages.

When Ben Bernanke pushed up short rates in 2004 and 2005, long rates did not similarly jump, because fears about future inflation were subdued and China was printing money at a mad pace to keep the yuan cheap against the dollar. A lot of that Chinese money came to America and pushed down mortgage rates.

Nowadays, the worry is about deflation, not rising prices. China is joined by Japan, the European Union, and other nations in rolling the printing presses.

by Deal Top“ href=”https://cmset.epochtimes.com/view.php?id=168086#">EASY MONEY policies abroad will keep mortgage rates low in America.

2. Bank fees and car loans will get more expensive.

New banking regulations designed to prevent a repeat of the 2008 financial meltdown are already pushing up banks’ cost of doing business. Higher short-term rates will make things worse.

Look for banks to further boost fees on checking accounts and related services, and charge higher rates for short-term credit—credit cards, car and appliances loans, and home improvements.

The good news is banks may start competing more for your money and pay higher rates on checking accounts.

3. Unemployment won’t be much affected.

Banks are already downsizing in the wake of heavier regulatory burdens as fast as they can. Higher rates won’t much change that trend. The same goes in the oil patch, where lower crude prices are curbing drilling activity and dampening employment in boom towns.

Elsewhere, finding a job is toughest for the long-term unemployed whose skills atrophied during the Great Recession and slow recovery, and for whom government benefits—expanded Medicaid and food stamps for healthy men—have often overwhelmed incentives to reskill.

If six years of rock-bottom interest rates didn’t get idle men off their couches, a few more years won’t help much.

4. Economic growth and inflation will pick up.

Consumers will soon start spending all the by Deal Top“ href=”https://cmset.epochtimes.com/view.php?id=168086#">EXTRA CASH lower gas prices have provided and will overwhelm the growth-slowing consequences of job cuts in the banking and oil sectors.

Overall, job gains will continue—likely not as quickly as anyone wants—but if Europe can avoid mishandling the Greek debt situation, the global economy won’t sink America’s boat.

Gasoline prices have bottomed and moderate inflation closer to 2 percent will return by summer. That should make Yellen confident to continue increasing the federal funds rate over two or three years.

5. Stock prices will continue to be strong.

Yellen has done a great job of preparing investors for higher interest rates. The economy has emerged from a tough recession and slow recovery, during which the Fed deemed ultra-low interest rates necessary. But in the past decades, by Deal Top“ href=”https://cmset.epochtimes.com/view.php?id=168086#">THE STOCK MARKET has moved upward solidly with short rates in the range of 3 or 4 percent. That should happen again.

With a strengthening economy, if you are planning a new car or home improvement, do it now. If you are an by Deal Top“ href=”https://cmset.epochtimes.com/view.php?id=168086#">INVESTOR on the sidelines, gradually start buying in.

America is not going out of business. It doesn’t need to give bankers free money to thrive.

Peter Morici, professor at the Robert H. Smith School of Business at the University of Maryland, is a recognized expert on economic policy and international economics. Previously he served as director of the Office of Economics at the U.S. International Trade Commission.