NEW YORK — St. Louis Federal Reserve President James Bullard cautioned Thursday that without central bank action on interest rates, inflation could become an even more serious problem.
«We're at more risk now than we've been in a generation that this could get out of control,» he said during a panel talk at Columbia University. «One scenario would be… a new surprise that hits us that we can't anticipate right now, but we would have even more inflation. That's the kind of situation that we want to… make sure it doesn't occur.»
Bullard has made news lately with his calls for aggressive Fed action. He has advocated for a full percentage point in rate increases by July in an effort to stem price surges that are running at the fastest pace in 40 years.
In his remarks Thursday, Bullard repeated his assertion that the Fed should «front-load» rate hikes as way to get ahead of inflation running at a 7.5% clip over the past year.
Fed officials had been resisting tightening policy, insisting for much of last year that the current run-up in prices was tied to pandemic-specific factors, such as clogged supply chains and outsized demand for goods over services, and would fade over time.
«Overall, I'd say there's been too much emphasis and too much mindshare devoted to the idea that inflation will dissipate at some point in the future,» Bullard said. «We're at risk that inflation won't dissipate, and 2022 will be the second year in a row of quite high inflation. So that's why given this situation, the Fed should move faster and more aggressively than we would have in other circumstances.»
The Fed has indicated it likely will start raising interest rates in March, which would be the first increase in more than three years. After that,
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