Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen, who will step down in February, has said she thinks the forces that have been holding inflation down are temporary and that she expects it will soon be on the rise again. Alex Wong / Getty Images
By John Ydstie / NPR
For the third time this year and the fifth time since the financial crisis, the Federal Reserve has increased interest rates another quarter of a point.
Fed policymakers announced an increase in the benchmark federal funds rate to a range of 1.25 percent to 1.5 percent, the third increase in the key rate this year. The move — which will mean higher rates on consumer loans, some mortgages, credit cards and other loans — indicates the central bank is confident in the strength of the economy and ready to push rates to more normal levels.
In a statement, the Fed said the labor market has continued to strengthen and economic activity “has been rising at a solid rate. Averaging through hurricane-related fluctuations, job gains have been solid, and the unemployment rate declined further.”
Economic growth has been running at a robust annual rate of just above 3 percent during the spring and summer.
The pending GOP tax overhaul being hammered out in a House-Senate conference committee is likely to provide additional stimulus in 2018 that could boost growth even more. That’s led some Fed officials to suggest that the central bank may want to pick up the pace of its rate hikes to prevent faster growth from igniting more rapid inflation.
Updated economic forecasts from Fed officials released Wednesday suggest the Fed will raise rates three times in 2018. That’s no change from their previous forecast, even though their forecast shows faster economic growth next year.
Fed Chair Janet Yellen will explain the Fed’s thinking at a news conference later Wednesday afternoon. This is her final news conference as Fed chair, though she will preside over one more meeting in late January.
Over the past two years the nation’s central bank has been gradually hiking its benchmark interest rate from a near-zero level. The fed funds rate influences a variety of other rates that consumers and businesses pay throughout the economy.
The Fed cut it to the near-zero level in December 2008 and kept it there for seven years in an effort to keep the economy on track after the financial crisis and ensuing recession.
The rate hikes have come at a time when there is very little inflationary pressure. In fact, inflation numbers have been consistently undershooting the Fed’s 2 percent target in recent years.
Yellen, who will step down in February, has said she thinks the forces that have been holding inflation down are temporary and that she expects it will soon be on the rise again, given the economy’s tight labor markets and improved growth rate.
With unemployment at 4.1 percent and the economy growing strongly, Yellen and others believe that employers will be forced to pay higher wages. That could also motivate companies to try to boost prices, triggering higher inflation.
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