US Federal Reserve will ‘adapt’ to any policy changes: Goolsbee
THE US Federal Reserve will “adapt” to policy changes made by the administration of US president Donald Trump, but would struggle to “disentangle” how those changes affect inflation from other factors impacting the American economy, a senior bank official said on Wednesday.
Since his return to the White House last month, Trump has threatened to impose sweeping tariffs on major US trading partners including China and the European Union, and pledged to slash taxes and deport millions of undocumented workers.
Many economists have criticised the administration’s tariff proposals as inflationary - a charge strongly denied by the US president and his economic advisors, who say they are an important negotiating tool to promote American interests.
“The Fed’s job is to monitor and adapt to the conditions, whatever they are,” Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee told AFP in an interview, adding that the independent US central bank had made “a lot of progress” on inflation and was still on track to hit its long-term target of two per cent.
But if inflation reignited, the Fed would have to “try to disentangle which parts of the inflation are indicators of potential overheating of the economy, which the Fed should pay close attention to, and which are temporary supply chain kind of factors,” he said.
“That disentanglement is not going to be that easy,” added Goolsbee, who is a voting member of the Fed’s rate-setting committee this year, without referring to Trump by name.
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‘Conditions have not changed’
As the independent US central bank, Fed officials typically do not comment on US government policy.
But they must still take those decisions into account when setting monetary policy - which they do primarily by raising or lowering the bank’s benchmark short-term lending rate.