The Federal Reserve may have to raise rates as high as 7 percent in order to have an impact on inflation, said James Bullard, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis.
As a voting member on the rate-setting Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), Bullard has been one of the hawkish voices on interest rate policy.
Defining the Taylor Rule
According to the standards set by the so-called “Taylor Rule,” Bullard believes that the Fed’s efforts to combat inflation are so far insufficient.He believes that the central bank would to have to at least raise its target range to 5.00–5.25 percent, from the current level of 3.75 percent, in order to curb rising prices.
Bullard noted said some of the worst inflation assessments may even recommend a target policy rate above 7 percent.On the other hand, the entire range of policies could be cut if prices tumbled more rapidly than expected, since “market expectations are for declining inflation in 2023.”
However, he said that it was up to Fed Chairman Jerome Powell to make the call on how high or fast the FOMC should move rates at its upcoming meetings.
“On the question of how much to do at any particular meeting ... I would leave that up to the Chair,” said Bullard.
“If you do more now, you have less to do in the first quarter [of 2023]. If you do less now, then you have more to do in the first quarter. Generally speaking, it probably does not make a lot of difference in terms of the macroeconomics.”
The Fed Stays the Course
The Fed has consecutively increased borrowing rates by 75 basis points since June, but is expected to reduce its next rate hike to 50 basis points at its next meeting on Dec. 13–14.
Bullard said that although inflation rates were slightly declining recently, it was clear that interest rates would need to be further increased.He dismissed last month’s decline in the annual pace of consumer inflation as merely a “tentative” sign that a disinflationary trend was taking place and that future data “could easily go the other way in the next report.”
Bullard explained that the Fed had been repeatedly “burned” by two years of bad analysis, while inflation remains well above its target of 2 percent.
His remarks have been backed by other Fed officials, with most still supporting the need to raise interest rates to slow inflation, while others were more open to lessening the pace of rate increases next year.“I have not in my 40 years with the Fed seen a time of this kind of tightening that you didn’t get some painful outcomes,” said George, explaining that an economic contraction was to be expected.