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Powell: Fed could keep lifting rates sharply 'for some time'

JACKSON HOLE, Wyoming (AP) 鈥 Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell delivered a stark message Friday: The Fed will likely impose more large interest rate hikes in coming months and is resolutely focused on taming the highest inflation in four decades .
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Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell speaks during a news conference at the Federal Reserve Board building in Washington, Wednesday, July 27, 2022. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

JACKSON HOLE, Wyoming (AP) 鈥 Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell delivered a stark message Friday: The Fed will likely impose more large interest rate hikes in coming months and is resolutely focused on taming the .

Powell also warned more explicitly than he has in the past that the Fed's continued tightening of credit will cause pain for many households and businesses as its higher rates further slow the economy and potentially lead to job losses.

鈥淭hese are the unfortunate costs of reducing inflation,鈥 he said in a high-profile speech at the Fed's annual economic symposium in Jackson Hole. 鈥淏ut a failure to restore price stability would mean far greater pain.鈥

Investors had been hoping for a signal that the Fed might soon moderate its rate increases later this year if inflation were to show further signs of easing. But the Fed chair indicated that that time may not be near.

After hiking its key short term rate by three-quarters of a point at each of its past two meetings 鈥 part of the Fed's fastest series of rate increases since the early 1980s 鈥 Powell said the Fed might ease up on that pace 鈥渁t some point鈥 鈥 suggesting that any such slowing isn't near.

Powell said the size of the Fed鈥檚 rate increase at its next meeting in late September 鈥 whether one-half or three-quarters of a percentage point 鈥 will depend on inflation and jobs data. An increase of either size, though, would exceed the Fed鈥檚 traditional quarter-point hike, a reflection of how severe inflation has become.

The Fed chair said that while lower inflation readings that have been reported for July have been 鈥渨elcome,鈥 鈥渁 single month鈥檚 improvement falls far short of what the Committee will need to see before we are confident that inflation is moving down.鈥

He noted that the history of high inflation in the 1970s, when the central bank sought to counter high prices with only intermittent rate hikes, shows that the Fed must stay focused.

鈥淭he historical record cautions strongly against prematurely鈥 lowering interest rates, he said. 鈥淲e must keep at it until the job is done.鈥

Powell's speech is the marquee event of the the Fed's , the first time the conference of central bankers is being held in person since 2019, after it went virtual for two years during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Since March, the Fed has implemented its to try to curbinflation, which has punished households with soaring costs for food, gas, rent and other necessities. The central bank has lifted its benchmark rate by 2 full percentage points in just four meetings, to a range of 2.25% to 2.5%.

Those hikes have led to , car loans and other consumer and business borrowing. Home sales since the Fed first signaled it would raise borrowing costs.

In June, the Fed's policymakers signaled that they expected their key rate to end 2022 in a range of 3.25% to 3.5% and then to rise further next year to between 3.75% and 4%. If rates reached their projected level at the end of this year, they would be at the highest point since 2008.

Powell is betting that he can engineer a high-risk outcome: Slow the economy enough to ease inflation pressures yet not so much as to trigger .

His task has been complicated by the economy's cloudy picture: On Thursday, the government said in the April-June period, the second straight quarter of contraction. Yet employers are and the number of people seeking unemployment aid, a measure of layoffs, .

At the same time, inflation is still crushingly high, though it has shown some signs of easing, notably in the form of declining gas prices.

At its meeting in July, Fed policymakers expressed two competing concerns that highlighted their delicate task.

According , the officials 鈥 who aren't identified by name 鈥 have prioritized their inflation fight. Still, some officials said there was a risk that the Fed would raise borrowing costs more than necessary, risking a recession. If inflation were to fall closer to the Fed's 2% target and the economy weakened further, those diverging views could become hard to reconcile.

At last year's Jackson Hole symposium, Powell listed five reasons why he thought inflation would be 鈥渢ransitory.鈥 Yet instead it has persisted, and many economists have noted that those remarks haven't aged well.

Powell indirectly acknowledged that history at the outset of his remarks Friday, when he said that, 鈥渁t past Jackson Hole conferences, I have discussed broad topics such as the ever-changing structure of the economy and the challenges of conducting monetary policy."

鈥淭oday," he said, 鈥渕y remarks will be shorter, my focus narrower and my message more direct.鈥

Christopher Rugaber, The Associated Press