Tuesday, March 25, 1997
Economists expect 'pre-emptive' increase in
interest rates Tuesday
By DAVE SKIDMORE Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Even though inflation shows no signs of worsening,
the Federal Reserve apparently is preparing to raise interest
rates for the first time in two years.
Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan seems bent on pre-emptive action
- the economic equivalent of firing before the enemy actually
gets to the battlefield.
The nation's inflation rate is actually lower so far this year:
2.3 percent for January and February compared with 3.3 percent
for all of last year.
But based on Greenspan's public statements, economists believe
a quarter-point increase in short-term rates is the nearly certain
result of Tuesday's meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee,
the central bank's monetary policy arm.
In congressional testimony last week, Greenspan stressed the
"importance of acting promptly - ideally pre-emptively -
to keep inflation low."
"If this is not the handwriting on the wall, I don't know
what is," said economist Sung Won Sohn of Norwest Corp. in
Minneapolis.
If all goes as anticipated, the Fed will drain reserves from
the banking system, pushing the rate charged among banks on overnight
loans from 5.25 percent to 5.5 percent. It will be the first increase
since Feb. 1, 1995.
In response, lenders are expected nudge the prime rate they
charge their best business customers from 8.25 percent to 8.5
percent. And millions of American consumers with short-term loans
- everything from auto loans to credit cards to adjustable-rate
home mortgages - will have to pay more, too.
As a result, six months to a year later, economic growth should
slacken a bit. That in turn should accomplish the Fed's intended
result: a small reduction in the economic pressures - drum-tight
labor markets, red-hot demand for raw materials - that exacerbate
inflation.
That's the theory - applauded by many economists though panned
by some. The Fed first tried it in 1994. Starting in February
of that year, it doubled the overnight interbank rate from 3 percent
to 6 percent, in seven steps over a 12-month period.
"It was very revolutionary and absolutely correct,"
said economist Allen Sinai of Primark Decision Economics in New
York. "In the old days, interest rates weren't raised until
the whites of the eyes were there, until inflation was rising,
and it was always too late."
The result of the new policy: contained inflation and sustained
economic expansion. Growth slowed from 3.5 percent in 1994 to
2 percent in 1995, before increasing to 2.4 percent in 1996.
As counter-intuitive as it seems, an early growth-slowing increase
in interest rates is aimed at extending the expansion, which began
its seventh year this month.
"Once inflation begins to accelerate, it's much more difficult
to get it back down without a recession," said economist
Paul W. Boltz of T. Rowe Price Associates in Baltimore. "Now
is the time to just very lightly tap on the breaks."
But other analysts - and the Clinton administration in its
1997 Economic Report of the President - argue it would be more
risky to slow economic growth prematurely than to allow a modest
increase in inflation.
"Right now Greenspan wants to pre-empt on the basis of
a projection no one is sure is right. That doesn't lead to good
policy," said economist Donald Ratajczak of Georgia State
University.
That was just the point made by lawmakers to Greenspan last
week.
"We're deeply concerned that a rise in interest rates
will choke off ... growth ... and all those people ... who haven't
had an opportunity to take part in it, will be denied that opportunity
yet again," said Rep. Maurice Hinchey, R-N.Y.
But Greenspan said the long lag between changes in interest
rates and their impact on the economy dictates a policy of pre-emption.
"We have no choice but to forecast and act on a forecast,"
Greenspan said. "Unless we do that, we will be behind the
curve a good deal of the time."
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