Fed Chief Says Pandemic Aid Not Primary Driver Of US Inflation
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell on Thursday downplayed the idea that government pandemic aid was the key factor fueling US inflation, instead blaming a confluence of global issues including the war in Ukraine.
While stimulus spending was a factor, "a great deal of the price increases that you saw were a matter of supply being unable to meet demand" and "when demand hits fixed supply, what happens is prices go up," Powell told lawmakers.
US inflation has surged to a 40-year high, picking up speed in recent months as the fallout from Russia's invasion of Ukraine has sent fuel and food prices soaring, with gas at more than $5 a gallon for the first time -- putting strain on American families.
Opposition Republicans have blamed President Joe Biden's $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan approved last year for the blistering price increases.
But Powell, who was testifying Thursday before a House committee, and others have noted that inflation is a global issue.
Democratic lawmaker Gregory Meeks noted that price hikes were caused mostly by "the supply chain, the China shutdown -- the complete shutdown, zero Covid policy, Russia's war in Ukraine, Covid."
"Isn't it just a massive storm of everything, is what contributes to inflation and causes it all over the world?" Meeks asked.
"Pretty much. That's a pretty good description," Powell said in the second day of his semi-annual testimony to Congress.
And, some of those factors are "out of our control -- for example, the price of oil and most of the price of food."
The Fed for months said price pressures were expected to be transitory, but Powell admitted that in hindsight, the Fed underestimated rising inflation.
The US central bank last week announced the sharpest interest rate increase in nearly 30 years and promised additional similar moves as part of its aggressive push to douse the inflation fires.
The moves have raised concerns the Fed could trigger a recession in the world's largest economy.
Powell said the commitment to bringing inflation back down to two percent from 8.6 percent in May is "unconditional" but he cautioned that the Fed does not have "precision tools" and acknowledged there is a risk of a downturn.
Avoiding that "has become significantly more challenging with the events of the past few months, particularly the war," he said.
But even if unemployment moves above the current historic low of 3.6 percent, even a jobless rate of 4.3 percent "is still a very strong labor market." he noted.
And the United States, unlike some other countries, has "a very strong economy" and Fed policymakers "have tools to deal with demand," Powell said.
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