Federal Reserve’s Chair Jerome Powell discussed the US economic outlook at the Economic Club of Chicago.
Key Quotes
- Well positioned to wait for greater clarity before considering any changes to policy stance.
- Us economy 'solid' despite heightened uncertainty, downside risks.
- At or near maximum employment, inflation a bit above 2% goal, has come down a great deal.
- Growth likely slowed in first quarter of 2025 from last year's solid pace.
- Strong first quarter imports to weigh on gdp growth.
- Sharp decline in business, household sentiment and elevated uncertainty, reflecting trade policy concerns.
- Labor market solid, broadly in balance, not contributing to inflation.
- PCE prices likely rose 2.3% in 12 months through march, core PCE estimated at 2.6%.
- Administration's policies still evolving, effects remain highly uncertain.
- So far larger-than-expected tariffs likely mean higher inflation, slower growth.
- Inflationary effects of tariffs could be more persistent, depends ultimately on inflation expectations.
- Our obligation is to keep longer-term inflation expectations well-anchored.
- May find ourselves in the challenging scenario in which dual-mandate goals are in tension.
- If that occurs, we would consider how far economy is from each goal and potential time horizons for those gaps to close.
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