The Federal Reserve is very close to its U.S. employment and inflation targets, the Fed's vice chair said on Monday, adding he is therefore "not enthusiastic" about raising the price-level target in an attempt to spur economic growth.
"We are very close to our targets" of full employment and 2-percent inflation, said Stanley Fischer. "So we're not in deep trouble with monetary policy at the moment," he responded when asked about the concept of raising the Fed's inflation target.
Earlier, Fischer said Monday that slow growth is hampering the Fed's plan to raise interest rates, arguing the government needs to boost the economy.
Amid worries that interest rates have been too low for too long, Fischer noted that people think the Fed can simply raise its benchmark short-term rate to push up long-term rates more broadly.
But "it is not that simple," he said in a speech to the Economic Club of New York.
With the Fed expected to raise the federal funds rate in December, Fischer cited key factors outside the central bank's control -- from demographics to technological innovation -- that limit the ability of monetary policy to enhance and shape economic growth.
He said low productivity growth, the increasing numbers of Americans retiring from the workforce, low corporate investment, and slow international economic growth are all working, against Fed policy, to dampen US economic growth.
"In summary, a variety of factors have been holding down interest rates and may continue to do so for some time," he said.
"But economic policy can help offset the forces driving down longer-run equilibrium interest rates," he said.
"Some combination of more encouragement for private investment, improved public infrastructure, better education, and more effective regulation is likely to promote faster growth of productivity and living standards."
Fischer said persistent low rates are a worrying problem, noting they signal that US long-run growth prospects could be "dim."
In addition, he said, low rates make the economy more vulnerable to shocks that can push it into recession, and give the Fed little room to maneuver to offset that.
(Newsmax wire services AFP and Reuters contributed to this report).
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