Federal Reserve signals plan to keep U.S. interest rate near zero until 2023 - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 05:28 AM | Calgary | -16.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Business

Federal Reserve signals plan to keep U.S. interest rate near zero until 2023

The Federal Reserve adjusted its inflation target to seek price increases above 2 per cent annually, a move that will likely keep interest rates low for years to come.

Central bank adjusts inflation target in move likely to keep rates low for longer

Jerome Powell is chair of the U.S. central bank, the Federal Reserve, which signaled on Wednesday that it plans to keep interest rates near zero for at least three years. (Jacquelyn Martin/The Associated Press)

The U.S. Federal Reserve adjusted its inflation target to seek price increases above twoper cent annually, a move that will likely keep interest rates low for years to come.

The Fed on Wednesday also left its benchmark short-term rate unchanged at nearly zero, where it has been since the pandemic intensified in March. Fed officials also indicated in a set of economic projections that they expect the rate to stay there at least through 2023.

The Fed's benchmark interest rate influences borrowing costs for home buyers, credit card usersand businesses.

The Fed's statement says that because inflation has mostly fallen below its target of twoper centin recent years, Fed policymakers now "will aim to achieve inflation moderately above twoper cent for some time." It also says it will keep rates low until inflation averages twoper cent over an unspecified period.

The change is significant for the central bank, because it means that Fed officials will accept higher inflation to make up for its previous shortfalls below twoper cent. Previously, the Fed has ignored such shortfalls.

Fed chair Jerome Powell first said last month that the Fed would seek inflation above twoper centover time, rather than just keeping it as a static goal.

The change reflects a growing concern at the Fed that in recessions, inflation often falls far below twoper cent, but it doesn't necessarily reach twoper centwhen the economy is expanding. Over time, that means inflation on average falls further from the target. As businesses and consumers come to expect increasingly lower inflation, they act in ways that entrench slower price gains.

The Fed prefers a little inflation because that gives the central bank more room to cut or raise short-term interest rates.