The U.S. Federal Reserve may need to raise interest rates further to ensure inflation is contained, Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell said on Friday in remarks that balanced declines in the pace of price increases over the past year with the surprising overperformance of the U.S. economy.
Powell said Fed policymakers would "proceed carefully as we decide whether to tighten further," but also made clear that the central bank has not yet concluded that its benchmark interest rate is high enough to be sure that inflation returns to the 2 percent target.
"It is the Fed’s job to bring inflation down to our 2 percent goal, and we will do so," Powell said. "We have tightened policy significantly over the past year. Although inflation has moved down from its peak—a welcome development—it remains too high. We are prepared to raise rates further if appropriate, and intend to hold policy at a restrictive level until we are confident that inflation is moving sustainably down toward our objective."
In that context, recent data has raised a new concern, he said.
"We are attentive to signs that the economy may not be cooling as expected," with consumer spending "especially robust" and the housing sector possibly rebounding, Powell said.
The economy continues to grow above trend, Powell said, and if that continues "it could put further progress on inflation at risk and could warrant further tightening of monetary policy."
His remarks showed the Fed wrestling with conflicting signals from an economy where inflation has by some readings slowed a lot without much cost to the economy—a good outcome, but one that has raised the possibility that Fed policy is not restrictive enough to complete the job.
It was difficult, he said, to know with precision the degree to which the Fed's current 5.25 percent to 5.5 percent benchmark interest rate had cleared the "neutral" rate of interest needed to slow the economy, and therefore hard to assess just where policy stands.
Powell repeated what has become a standard Fed diagnosis of inflation progress—with a pandemic-era jump in goods inflation easing and a decline in housing inflation "in the pipeline," but concern that continued consumer spending on a broad array of services and a tight labor market may make a return to 2 percent difficult.
A recent decline in measures of underlying inflation, stripped of food and energy prices, "were welcome, but two months of good data are only the beginning of what it will take to build confidence that inflation is moving down sustainably," Powell said.
"Given the size" of the broader services sector, excluding housing, "some further progress will be essential," the Fed chief said, and it will likely require an economic slowdown to deliver it.
"Restrictive monetary policy will likely play an increasingly important role. Getting inflation sustainably back down to 2% is expected to require a period of below-trend economic growth as well as some softening in labor market conditions," Powell said.
"Two percent is and will remain our inflation target," Powell said. "We are committed to achieving and sustaining a stance of monetary policy that is sufficiently restrictive to bring inflation down to that level over time."
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; editing by Andrea Ricci)