Economists Warn More Fed Rate Hikes Would ‘Push Millions Out of Work’
Hotter-than-expected inflation data published Wednesday intensified fears among progressive economists that the Federal Reserve—in its single-minded drive to tame price increases—will needlessly lock in another major interest rate hike at its policy meeting later this month, further suppressing economic demand and moving the country closer to a recession.
“This morning’s report highlights the fact that aggressive interest rate hikes by the Fed have done little to combat the inflation that continues to take a toll on workers, families, and small businesses across the country,” said Dr. Rakeen Mabud, chief economist at the Groundwork Collaborative. “Additional rate hikes would push millions out of work and… raise the risk of a recession that would only worsen economic pain.”
While the Labor Department’s consumer price index (CPI) figure for June landed above analyst forecasts at 9.1% year over year—an indication of sustained inflationary pressures across the economy—experts stressed that the numbers don’t reflect key developments that could signal a slowdown in price surges, which have eaten away at workers’ wages and increased economic strain for households in the form of higher rent, grocery costs, and other expenses.
“A similar reading last month led to a large overreaction by many, including the Federal Reserve, who raised policy rates by 0.75 percentage points,” noted Josh Bivens, research director at the Economic Policy Institute. “There is even less reason this time to overreact to a hot inflation reading.”
“We all know that the main drivers of today’s large number is commodity prices (mostly energy and food),” he added, “and we also know that many of these prices have fallen sharply in recent weeks.”
The average price of gas in the U.S., for instance, has declined for 28 consecutive days, hitting $4.66 per gallon on Tuesday—significantly lower than the unprecedented $5.01 national average recorded in mid-June.
“It is hard to feel good about this report, but with wage growth slowing sharply in the last six months to around 4% (compared to 3.4% in 2019), it’s hard to see how an inflation rate north of 9% can be sustained,” Dean Baker, senior economist at the Center for Economic and Policy Research, wrote in a brief analysis of the newly released price data. “Lower gas prices should pull July inflation lower.”
The central bank appears hellbent on imposing additional rate hikes even though top officials, including Fed Chair Jerome Powell, have admitted that the blunt policy tool will do nothing to tackle sky-high energy and food prices.
Rate hikes also won’t repair supply chain snags stemming from the coronavirus pandemic or tackle corporate profiteering, which progressive economists and lawmakers have argued is a major factor in persistent inflation.
Mabud of the Groundwork Collaborative, stated that “policymakers must tackle inflation at its source: by addressing the rampant corporate profiteering and snarled supply chains that are causing significant financial hardship across the country.”
Originally published at Commondreams.org, written by Jake Johnson.