Atlanta Federal Reserve Bank President Raphael Bostic laid out a case on Thursday against any further U.S. interest rate hikes, saying monetary policy is already tight enough to bring inflation back down to 2 percent over a “reasonable” period.
“I feel policy is appropriately restrictive,” Mr. Bostic said in remarks prepared for delivery to the South African Reserve Bank Biennial Conference in Cape Town, South Africa. “We should be cautious and patient and let the restrictive policy continue to influence the economy, lest we risk tightening too much and inflicting unnecessary economic pain.”
However, “that does not mean I am for easing policy any time soon,” he noted.
U.S. central bankers are widely expected to leave the Fed’s policy rate in the current range of 5.25 percent–5.5 percent when they next meet in a little less than three weeks.
But financial markets are pricing in close to even odds that the Fed will ultimately lift that rate another quarter of a percentage point by year’s end, given still too-high inflation, stronger-than expected economic growth, and still-low unemployment, most recently measured at 3.5 percent.
As of mid-June, a large majority of U.S. central bankers also thought a Fed policy rate in the 5.5 percent–5.75 percent range would be needed to win the fight against inflation.
Mr. Bostic has been in the minority at the Fed, cautioning against over-tightening policy and needlessly hurting jobs and livelihoods.
Some 5.25 percentage points of interest-rate hikes since March 2022 have already helped put inflation on a clear downward path, Mr. Bostic said on Thursday, noting that consumer price inflation has dropped from a 9 percent peak last summer to 3.2 percent in July.
And given that falling rents have yet to be reflected in housing services inflation data, he said, the underlying pace of inflation “may well be close to our target already.”
Business surveys show fewer firms plan to continue raising prices, he noted, and the percentage of items within the consumer price index that are registering 5 percent or higher inflation has fallen to 35 percent, down from 80 percent last summer.
Meanwhile, the labor market is cooling, Mr. Bostic said, and employers say they do not plan to raise prices to keep pace with the higher wages they are paying.
Overall, he said, the Fed must stay “resolute” on keeping policy tight until it is clear that inflation is on track to reaching the Fed’s 2 percent goal over a reasonable time frame, he said.
“I believe policy is already restrictive enough to get us there.”
Fed policymakers will release fresh projections at the close of their Sept. 19–20 meeting that will show how many of Mr. Bostic’s colleagues may now agree with that view.