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Inflation Fears Cut Two Ways at the Fed

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 APRIL 4, 2010





Inflation Fears Cut Two Ways at the Fed

By JON HILSENRATH



The Federal Reserve's decisions to keep interest rates near zero and to flood the financial

system with credit are sparking fears of an eventual outbreak of inflation.



But inside the Fed, an influential band of policy makers is fretting over the opposite: that

the already-low rate of inflation is slowing further.



The heated debate at the Federal Reserve over whether if, and by how much, inflation is

slowing will determine when the Fed decides to raise rates, Jon Hilsenrath reports.



The presidents of the New York and San Francisco regional Fed banks, William Dudley

and Janet Yellen, see the abating inflation rate as convincing evidence the economy still

is burdened by excess capacity and needs to be sustained by the Fed.



Others, led by Philadelphia Fed President Charles Plosser, argue that current inflation

measures are distorted by an epic decline in housing costs and could mask a buildup of

inflationary pressures.



This intensifying internal Fed debate over the behavior of inflation comes as the central

bank plots an exit from an unprecedented experiment in easy money. Its read on inflation

will influence how quickly it moves to raise short-term interest rates—which impacts

everything from mortgage rates to new business costs to stock performance—and drain

huge sums it pumped into the financial system during the recession. Recent developments

have given the inflation-rate-is-dropping camp an upper hand.

In 2008, overall consumer prices actually fell for the first time in half a century, but then

rebounded as energy prices stabilized. Over the past 12 months, the consumer-price index

has risen 2.1%. But measures of inflation that strip out volatile energy and food prices are

decelerating. Excluding food and energy, consumer prices in February were 1.3% higher

than a year earlier. That was the smallest 12-month increase in six years, and well below

year-over-year increases of above 2% before the recession.



"When unemployment is so high, wages and incomes tend

to rise slowly, and producers and retailers have a hard time

raising prices," Ms. Yellen, who is expected to be

President Barack Obama's nominee to become the Fed's

vice chairman, said in a speech last week. "That's the

situation we're in today, and, as a result, underlying

inflation pressures are already very low and trending

downward."



Mr. Dudley made similar comments in comments in

Lexington, Va., last week. "The substantial amount of

slack in productive capacity that exists today will likely

only be absorbed gradually. Consequently, trend inflation,

at least over the near term, should remain very low."



In this camp, one worry is that inflation-adjusted

interest rates—also known as real interest rates—could

rise even if the Fed sits on its hands (THIS WAS

WHAT GREENSPAN WAS WORRIED ABOUT IN 2003 AND THUS, HE

‘CHASED’ THE DISINFLATION BY LOWERING THE FED FUNDS RATE TO

PREVENT THE REAL RATE FROM RISING AND JEOPARDIZING THE JOB-

LOSS RECOVERY – GREAT STUFF  . Such a rise would be a disincentive for

businesses to invest in new projects and for consumers to spend.



This unintended increase in rates could put a brake on the economic recovery.



The opposing camp believes the combination of low rates and more than $1 trillion the

Fed has pumped into the financial system is a formula for inflation down the road. "As

the economy improves and as lending picks up, the longer-term challenge we face will

not be worrying about inflation being too low," Mr. Plosser said in an interview. "The

risk is really to the upside of inflation over the next two to three years."



This camp focuses less on the amount of slack in the economy—the high unemployment

rate and the number of empty office buildings, shopping malls and idle factories—and

more on the risk that consumers and businesses will anticipate inflation and act

accordingly. At the Fed's mid-March meeting, Thomas Hoenig, president of the Kansas

City Fed, argued for an increase in short-term interest rates "soon" to "lower the risks

of...an increase in long-run inflation expectations."



Surveys and bond price movements suggest Americans expect inflation of around 2%

year-in and year-out, and Fed officials believe this helps keep the inflation rate stable. A

change in inflation expectations in either direction could become important in Fed

deliberations.



Mr. Plosser also argues that the recent decline in the inflation rate is a mirage, greatly

influenced by an unusual decline in housing costs, which are heavily weighted in many

price indexes. Excluding the cost of shelter, consumer prices were up 3.4% from a year

earlier in February, pushed up in part by energy prices.



Excluding food, energy and housing, they were up 2.6% from a year ago. "I want to be

careful not to read too much into one measure of inflation that is very influenced by

housing," Mr. Plosser said.



Researchers at the San Francisco and New York Fed are scheduled to release a retort to

this argument Monday that shows that among 50 different categories of consumer

spending—from computers to hotels to jewelry—inflation rates have slowed over the

past 18 months from the earlier trend.



The Fed has said it would keep short-term rates low for an "extended period," a phrase

which means at least several months—as long as inflation is subdued, inflation

expectations are stable and the economy is slack.



A persistent slowing of the inflation rate could push rate increases further into the future,

possibly into 2011. But if officials dismiss recent data or if the pace of price increases

accelerates, the Fed may boost rates before year-end.



Traders in futures markets anticipate the Fed will raise its benchmark federal-funds

rate—which it has been holding near zero since December 2008—to 0.5% by November.



A wide range of companies recently have noted difficulty in trying to raise prices.

General Electric Co., for instance, in a conference call with analysts, said prices of

locomotive engines were falling because of excess supply. Speedway Motorsports Inc.,

which operates Nascar racetracks and drag strips, said it would reduce ticket prices

between 4% and 5% this year.



"We have started to see a glimpse of the economy stabilizing," said Marcus Smith,

Speedway's president. But he said he still had to fight hard to keep his customers.



"We're doing everything we can to make sure our existing customers are very happy. If

they'll extend [contracts] this year for multi years we're willing to give better pricing and

better terms."

But last week's Institute for Supply Management survey of factory managers found a

rising fraction of respondents report paying higher prices for materials. In March, 53%

said they were paying more—especially companies using petroleum products, wood and

primary metals.



Although the consumer-price index gets more public attention, the Fed prefers another

measure—the personal consumption expenditures index.



Excluding food and energy, it is up 1.3% from a year ago, and the slowdown is

intensifying: Over the past three months, it has risen at an annual pace of just 0.5%, a

slowdown that has been noticed by Fed officials. The Fed's preferred level for this

measures is between 1.5% to 2%.



Write to Jon Hilsenrath at jon.hilsenrath@wsj.com



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