31 December 2025

Fed Debates Early Rate Increases

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Federal Reserve officials debated at their July policy meeting whether they might need to raise interest rates sooner than expected in light of a strengthening recovery, but they were restrained by lingering doubts about whether the economy's gains would persist. The minutes of the meeting show an intensifying debate inside the central bank about when to respond to a surprisingly swift descent in the unemployment rate and a pickup in consumer prices.

Some Fed officials say this long-sought economic progress warrants moving toward tighter credit soon, but they were outnumbered at the meeting by those who wanted more evidence before signaling that rate increases are on the way.

Short-term U.S. rates have been held near zero since the depths of the financial crisis in December 2008. Most Fed officials believe they can wait until 2015 before raising rates and have encouraged a perception in financial markets that rate increases won't start until the middle of the year.

The search for clues on rate-hike timing now turns to Fed Chairwoman Janet Yellen's address Friday at a central-bank symposium in Jackson Hole, Wyo. The conference is focused on labor markets and Ms. Yellen has argued through her first six months on the job that an abundance of part-time workers and long-term unemployed suggest labor markets and the broader economy weren't near overheating.

Stocks initially dipped on the report, which analysts said struck some investors as more sympathetic to rate increases than before, but share prices largely finished higher. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.35%. Yields on 10-year Treasury notes rose to 2.426%; they remain down more than half a percentage point from early this year.

The Fed's next move depends largely on how the economy performs in the second half of the year. The jobless rate was 6.2% in July, down from 7.3% a year earlier. Inflation has picked up after running below the Fed's 2% objective for two straight years. The U.S. economy grew at a 4% annual rate in the second quarter after contracting during the wintry first quarter.

Since the last meeting, inflation data have softened a touch and the jobless rate ticked up by one-tenth of a percentage point. Among the Fed's major concerns: The economy's first-quarter contraction caused uncertainty about the outlook.

The Fed has been saying for months it expects to keep its benchmark federal funds rate near zero for a "considerable time" after it completes a bond-buying stimulus program in October. Officials who want early rate increases are pushing the central bank to drop that guidance.

Fed officials also were at odds over how to describe the job market. Some disagreed with a new sentence in the central bank's policy statement declaring that "significant underutilization of labor resources" persisted.

Click here to access the full article on The Wall Street Journal. 

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