As prices rise at rapid pace, Fed chief seeks patience

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Federal Reserve Board Chair Jerome Powell testifies before Senate Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs hearing to examine the Semiannual Monetary Policy Report to Congress, Thursday, July 15, 2021, on Capitol Hill in Washington. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana)

WASHINGTON – For anyone watching with concern as prices surge for everything from food and gas to airplane tickets and clothes, the message from Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell over two days of congressional hearings this week was straightforward: Just give it more time and those price gains should slow, or even reverse.

The Fed chair acknowledged that the U.S. is in the midst of an unparalleled economic reopening on the heels of a pandemic-induced recession, making it that much more difficult to anticipate how things like inflation and unemployment will play out.

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“This particular inflation is just unique in history,” Powell said Thursday before the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee. “We don’t have another example of the last time we reopened a $20 trillion economy. We’re humble about what we understand.”

Powell gave his twice-a-year monetary policy report to Congress this week. On Wednesday, he appeared before the House Financial Services Committee where he said inflation may slow “in six months or so,” suggesting a clear reading on inflation won’t come until the end of the year.

“This is the Fed saying it is prepared to endure a longer period of elevated inflation than just a few months,” Tim Duy, chief U.S. economist at SGH Macro Advisers, a consulting firm, wrote this week.

Powell aimed to soothe senators and members of Congress, with Republicans in particular repeatedly raising the issue of higher prices, often blaming them on President Joe Biden's $1.9 trillion rescue package enacted in March.

The Biden administration has said the recent burst of inflation reflected the nature of restarting the U.S. economy.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki told reporters at a Thursday briefing that supply-chain issues and the shortage of semiconductors are being addressed through legislation and executive actions. The ultimate goal is to increase the supply of available goods, something Psaki said the president’s jobs and infrastructure package would help with.

“We understand the threat that inflation poses,” Psaki said. “We will be vigilant.”

On Tuesday, the U.S. reported that prices paid by Americans in June surged more than they have in the past 13 years. Powell acknowledged that the increases have been larger than he — and most economists — anticipated.

He attributed the gains to a narrow set of industries that were hit hard by soaring demand and in many cases, severe supply shortages, as the nation emerged from the worst of the pandemic.

“It’s airplane tickets, it’s hotel rooms and it’s a handful of other things, and they account for essentially all of the overshoot,” Powell said.

“We think that those things are clearly temporary, we don’t know when they’ll end, but they’ll go away,” he said.

Powell conceded that there are forces that could emerge that would continue to lift inflation, though he did not name any. Some economists worry that rising home prices and rents could act as a longer-term boost to consumer prices. But Powell said the Fed is monitoring price trends closely and will react to any such changes.

“We won’t have to wait a tremendously long time, I don’t think, to know whether our basic understanding of this is right,” he said.

Kathy Bostjancic, an economist at Oxford Economics, said that because Powell referred several times to a six-month time frame, it “seems by then he will judge if indeed it’s temporary or more permanent.”

The Fed has said it will keep its benchmark short-term interest rate pegged near zero until it believes maximum employment has been reached and annual inflation moderately exceeds 2% for some time. The central bank’s policymakers have said they’re prepared to accept inflation above its target to make up for years of inflation below 2%.

Powell acknowledged Thursday that inflation is currently well above 2%, adding “of course we’re not comfortable with that.” But he noted that unemployment also remains elevated at 5.9%, and argued that the Fed doesn't want to raise interest rates to counter what it sees as temporarily higher prices.

The Fed is also purchasing $120 billion a month in Treasurys and mortgage-backed securities, which are intended to keep longer-term interest rates low to encourage borrowing and spending. The Fed has started discussing its timeframe for reducing those bond buys, Powell said, and will continue to do so at its next meeting in two weeks.

Some economists believe that the Fed will likely announce a reduction in those purchases as soon as September, though others argue a November or December announcement is more likely.

On a separate issue, Powell took heat from two Senate Democrats — Sherrod Brown from Ohio and Elizabeth Warren from Massachusetts — for policy decisions that they said loosened regulations on the largest U.S. banks.

“It’s time you change the way you think about regulating the biggest banks," Brown said.

Powell's current four-year term ends next February. If Biden decides to reappoint him, that announcement could come as early as this fall. Some progressive groups support replacing Powell with someone more supportive of tougher financial regulation.

On a separate issue, Powell said Thursday that he remained undecided on the merits of a digital dollar, also known as a central bank digital currency. A digital currency would enable faster payments among banks, consumers and businesses and potentially allow Americans to hold dollars in electronic wallets on smart phones without needing an account at a conventional bank.

"I’m legitimately undecided on whether the benefits outweigh the costs or vice versa," Powell said.

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AP Writer Josh Boak contributed to this report.