Tuesday, September 30, 1997
How much longer will the Federal Reserve watch
and wait?
By DAVE SKIDMORE Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - The economy seems to be settling into a more
stable growth pattern. Most economists believe that will keep
the Federal Reserve from raising interest rates right now. But
how much longer?
The answer may depend on the groundwork laid in debate during
central bank policy-makers' closed-door meeting on Tuesday.
With the expectation for no immediate rate change, stocks rallied
Monday, pushing the Dow Jones average of industrial stocks up
69.25 points to 7,991.43, its highest close since Aug. 20.
As they look over the economy, Fed officials have got to be
pretty pleased with what they see: plenty of growth and not much
inflation.
"You have to go back to the early 1960s to see anything
remotely similar," said economist David Jones of Aubrey G.
Lanston & Co. in New York. " 'So far, so good,' is the
Fed's view."
The economy grew very strongly in the first half of the year,
at an annual rate of 4.1 percent, pushing the nation's unemployment
rate below 5 percent for the first time since 1973.
In the past, that's been a harbinger of higher inflation, which
can frazzle financial markets and short-circuit an expansion.
The cure has been a preventative dose of higher interest rates
aimed at moderating growth and keeping a lid on prices.
Yet policy-makers have little reason to bump up short-term
interest rates, because inflation this year has improved, not
worsened.
Consumer prices - excluding food and energy costs, which bounce
around a lot - have risen at a scant 2.2 percent annual rate so
far this year, down from 2.6 percent last year and the best since
1965.
"It's been an incredible streak of luck," said economist
Paul Getman of Regional Financial Associates in West Chester,
Pa. "I'm shocked. But if it lasts more than another six months,
I'll be doubly shocked. I really think by next spring the Fed
will be back to raising rates."
Jones said the move could come even sooner, at meetings scheduled
for Nov. 12 or Dec. 16.
Just how soon the Fed moves depends on whether economic growth
moderates enough the rest of this year to ease strain on factory
capacity and the labor supply.
It also depends on a likely topic of debate at Tuesday's meeting:
the explanation for the good luck that has allowed the Fed to
leave its benchmark rate on overnight loans between banks at 5.5
percent since March 25.
One argument, cautiously advanced by Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan,
admits to the possibility the economy has entered a new era of
increased productivity, driven by the rapid advance of technology
in such fields at computing and telecommunications.
A long-run trend toward increased productivity, "new economy"
proponents argue, is allowing corporations to pay both workers
and stockholders more without raising prices faster than before.
Another school of thought, outlined in a speech two weeks ago
by Fed board member Laurence H. Meyer, gives more weight to transitory
forces holding down inflation. These include a strong dollar that
has led to a decline in import prices, a slowdown in health insurance
costs, a drop in oil prices and plummeting computer prices.
In the weeks ahead, any data showing that restraint on inflation
is abating would settle the argument, at least temporarily, in
favor of the second school and would be likely to trigger an interest-rate
increase, analysts said.
"In a sense, this is an economy that's sitting around
waiting for something bad to happen. We know ultimately it will
happen but we don't know when and we don't know to what degree,"
said economist Robert Dederick of Northern Trust Co. in Chicago.
The last report available before the meeting, released by the
Commerce Department on Monday, showed consumer spending moderating
to a 0.3 percent advance in August from a brisk 1 percent in July,
even though personal income increased a robust 0.6 percent.
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Abilene Reporter-News / Texnews / E.W. Scripps. Publications
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