Wednesday, October 28, 2015

Why Fed may hike rates before seeing whites of inflation's eyes

Further falls in America's jobless rate will lead inflation to start rising early next year, according to a forecast based on research Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen has cited as shaping her confidence a rate hike could be needed this year.

Yellen has recently faced a rebellion at the central bank, with two Fed governors arguing that rate hikes should be delayed because of a breakdown in the tendency of low unemployment to fuel faster inflation, a relationship called the Phillips curve.

Governor Lael Brainard said this month that the Phillips curve relationship was "at best, very weak at the moment" while Daniel Tarullo said it has not been "operating effectively for 10 years now."

With the Fed's rate-setting committee meeting on Tuesday and Wednesday, Yellen and Vice Chair Stanley Fischer may seek to show the bank should not wait for inflation to appear before hiking rates. Both Yellen and Fischer have backed the relationship between jobs and inflation.

"The Phillips curve is alive and well," said Robert Gordon, an academic at Northwestern University whose 2013 paper on the subject was cited by Yellen and Fischer in speeches this year.

Gordon said the key reading to watch for signs of inflation was the short-term unemployment rate, those out of work less than six months, rather than the overall jobless rate. The relationship between that short-term joblessness and prices has held for 50 years, he said.

The short-term rate appears to matter because businesses set wages based on plausible candidates for a job, so the surge in people out of work for long spells since the recession might not influence inflation.

The short-term jobless rate has sunk to 3.7%, which is lower than it was at the outset of the 2007-09 recession. The overall unemployment rate is currently 5.1%.

Gordon's projection is that the short-term rate will sink to 3.5% by the end of 2016 and 3.3 percent by early 2017.

Inflation excluding food and energy, currently at 1.3%, would start slowly in the first quarter of 2016, with overall inflation rising from its current 0.3% rate to the Fed's 2% target by 2020, Gordon said.

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