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Fed’s Waller Nods to Economic ‘Collateral Damage’ as Rates Rise

Fed’s Waller Nods to Economic ‘Collateral Damage’ as Rates Rise

The Federal Reserve is doing all it can to avoid “collateral damage” from raising interest rates, a “brute-force tool” that can act as a “hammer” on the economy, Governor Christopher Waller said. 

“When you have to use a brute-force tool, sometimes there’s some collateral damage that happens,” Waller said Monday at a Fed Listens event in Nashville that was also broadcast virtually. “We’re trying to do this in a way that there’s not much of it, but we can’t tailor policy.”

Fed officials raised rates by a quarter point last month to a target range of 0.25% to 0.5% and signaled they expect to lift rates to 1.9% by the end of 2022 and 2.8% by the end of next year, according to their median forecast.

Fed’s Waller Nods to Economic ‘Collateral Damage’ as Rates Rise

Since then, officials have said they are open to moving faster if needed to quell the hottest inflation in four decades, including by hiking by a half-point at their May 3-4 meeting.

Minutes of the Fed’s March meeting showed that many of them had favored going that big last month, but they opted for a more cautious quarter-point hike in light of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and were open to raising rates by a half point at one or more meetings going forward.

Waller said the “tricky part” will be whether the Federal Open Market Committee can continue to raise rates without causing problems in areas such as employment and production.  

“With housing -- can we cool off demand for housing without tanking the construction industry? Can we cool down the labor demand without causing employment to fall? That’s that’s the tricky road that we’re on,” Waller said. 

©2022 Bloomberg L.P.