| February 20, 2008 Fed downgrades forecast of future economic activity
|
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Federal Reserve on Wednesday lowered its
projection for economic growth this year, citing damage from the
double blows of a housing slump and credit crunch. It said it also
expects higher unemployment and inflation.
The updated forecasts come amid worry by Federal Reserve
Chairman Ben Bernanke and his colleagues that the economy could
continue to weaken, even after their aggressive interest rate cuts
in January, according to minutes of those private deliberations
released Wednesday.
"With no signs of stabilization in the housing sector and with
financial conditions not yet stabilized, the committee agreed that
downside risks to growth would remain even after this action,"
minutes of the Fed's Jan. 29-30 closed door meeting showed.
The Fed at that session voted to cut a key interest rate by
one-half percentage point to 3 percent at that meeting. Just eight
day earlier, the Fed, in an emergency session, slashed its rate by
a rare three-quarters percentage point. The two rate cuts together
marked the most dramatic rate reductions in a single month by the
Fed in a quarter century.
Under its new economic forecast, the Fed said that it now
believes the gross domestic product will grow between 1.3 percent
and 2 percent this year. That's lower than a previous Fed forecast
for growth, which at that time was estimated to be between 1.8
percent and 2.5 percent.
GDP is the value of all goods and services
produced within the
United States and is the best barometer of the country's economic
fitness.
With economic growth slowing, the Fed projected that the
national jobless rate will rise to between 5.2 percent to 5.3
percent this year. That is higher than the central bank's old
forecast for the rate to climb to as high as 4.9 percent. Last
year, the unemployment rate averaged 4.6 percent.
And, with energy prices marching upward, the Fed also raised its
projection for inflation. The Fed now expects inflation to be
between 2.1 percent and 2.4 percent this year. That's higher than
its old forecast for inflation, which was estimated to come in at
around 1.8 percent to 2.1 percent.
The Fed said its revised forecasts reflected a number of factors
including "a further intensification of the housing market
correction, tighter credit conditions .... ongoing turmoil in
financial markets and higher oil prices."
The combination of slower economic growth and increasing
inflation could complicate the Fed's work. The central bank is
trying to keep the economy growing, while ensuring that inflation
stays under control. The Fed's remedy for a weakening economy is
interest rate cuts. To combat inflation, the Fed usually boosts
rates.
Oil prices on Tuesday jumped to a new record - topping $100 a
barrel. Consumer prices, meanwhile, rose by a bigger-than-expected
0.4 percent in January, according to new government figures
released Wednesday.
Fed policymakers were mindful that they needed to keep a close
eye on inflation, minutes of the Jan. 29-30 meeting said.
And, some policymakers noted that when prospects for economic
growth improved, "a reversal of a portion of the recent easing
actions, possibly even a rapid reversal, might be appropriate,"
according to the documents.
Still, all but one of the Fed's members agreed to lower rates by
a half-point at that time.
Richard Fisher, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
was the sole dissenter. He preferred no change. The minutes showed
that Fisher felt that the level of interest rates were already
"quite stimulative, while headline inflation was too high."
(Copyright 2008 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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