Tags: Federal Reserve | William Dudley | Goldman Sachs | rates

Fed's Dudley Downplays Divisions, Says Policymakers on Same Page

Thursday, 15 October 2015 03:53 PM EDT

U.S. Federal Reserve policymakers are not as divided as it may appear and are generally operating under the same framework for determining when to raise interest rates, New York Fed President William Dudley said on Thursday.

Many Fed watchers are exasperated by the mixed messages from the U.S. central bank in recent weeks. Fed Chair Janet Yellen and other officials have said they expect a rate hike will be needed by the end of this year, but two Fed governors this week urged caution.

Dudley, who repeated his view that a rate hike was likely by year's end, acknowledged the Fed hasn't communicated well, but he downplayed the differences that existed among officials.

"At the end of the day people are exaggerating" the divisions, Dudley said in response to a question after a panel presentation in Washington. "We are all pretty much on the same page."

The Fed surprised half of Wall Street in September by holding rates steady rather than hiking. The central bank was worried by turmoil in global financial markets and the possibility a China-led global economic slowdown could knock the United States off course.

Now investors and economists are confused over what it will take to get the Fed to pull the trigger.

"No one knows what you are doing," said John Taylor, a prominent economist on monetary theory who was on the panel with Dudley. "You can be out there talking all the time and thinking you're being transparent and just confusing things."

In an at-times heated debate, Dudley said the Fed has made clear it needs to be more confident that inflation will rise toward its 2 percent target before hiking rates.

He said it was reasonable for policymakers to come to different conclusions over where the economy is going.

"What's unclear is the economy," Dudley said.

While evidence is mounting that economic growth is cooling in America, Dudley said much of the slowdown appeared to be due to temporary factors. He said a strong dollar was also playing a role but that the economy still seemed to be growing at a healthy clip.

Moreover, falling unemployment will eventually lead to rising prices, Dudley said, adding that he does not need to see price increases to be confident that they will trend higher.

"I see a linkage between pressure on labor market resources and my confidence in inflation," he said.

© 2025 Thomson/Reuters. All rights reserved.


Economy
U.S. Federal Reserve policymakers are not as divided as it may appear and are generally operating under the same framework for determining when to raise interest rates, New York Fed President William Dudley said on Thursday.
Federal Reserve, William Dudley, Goldman Sachs, rates
396
2015-53-15
Thursday, 15 October 2015 03:53 PM
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