Low inflation bugs central bankers

In this Thursday, Aug 25, 2016, file photo, Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen arrives for a reception on the opening night of the annual conference of the world's central bankers, north of Jackson Hole, Wyo.
In this Thursday, Aug 25, 2016, file photo, Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen arrives for a reception on the opening night of the annual conference of the world's central bankers, north of Jackson Hole, Wyo.

JACKSON HOLE, Wyoming -- Against a backdrop of strengthening growth but chronically low inflation, Federal Reserve Chairman Janet Yellen and other central bankers are taking their measure of the global economy at their annual conference in the shadow of Wyoming's Grand Teton Mountains.

With the prospect of new leadership at the Fed within months, investors will be listening for any hint of shifting interest-rate plans from the policymakers. The most watched events come today, when Yellen and Mario Draghi, head of the European Central Bank, will each address the conference.

Though a surprise announcement can't be ruled out, most analysts expect no major policy changes to be announced by either leader. Still, central bankers going back to Alan Greenspan's appearances in the 1980's have sometimes used the annual conference to send messages to the financial markets.

Yellen's predecessor, Ben Bernanke, signaled a new round of Fed bond purchases in 2010 to try to invigorate a weak U.S. recovery. And last year, Yellen let markets know that more rate increases were coming. The Jackson Hole conference, sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, is in its 41st year.

The conference occurs as the Fed is in the midst of gradually and modestly raising its benchmark rate to reflect a strengthened U.S. economy. By contrast, the European Central Bank is still buying bonds to keep keeping rates at ultralow levels but may be preparing to slowly taper its purchases next year.

The official theme of this year's conference -- "Fostering a Dynamic Global Economy" -- is certainly timely. Though the global economy appears more stable than at any other point in the past decade, growth since the 2008-2009 recession has remained sluggish in the United States and most other industrial countries. One consequence is that discontent has grown among groups that feel left behind, having helped fuel Donald Trump's election victory and Britain's vote to exit the European Union.

The stated topic of Yellen's speech Friday will be financial stability, which may provide a platform to address concerns that the Fed's ultralow rates have fueled asset bubbles in the stock market. Many Fed officials, including Yellen, have said in the past that they do not think asset prices have reached dangerous heights.

The Fed has raised its key policy rate twice this year, in March and June. It's still signaling that it plans to raise rates a third time before year's end and to begin paring its bond portfolio -- a move that could increase rates on mortgages and some other loans.

Many analysts say they think the Fed will keep raising rates at only a very gradual pace until it's confident that a recent puzzling slowdown in inflation reflects temporary factors. Inflation has been running below the Fed's 2 percent target for five years. Chronically low inflation can depress economic growth because consumers typically delay purchases when they think prices will stay the same or even decline.

Yellen could offer guidance today on what the Fed might announce at its next meeting, Sept. 19-20, about its key short-term rate or about the expected start of its parings of its bond portfolio.

Investors will also be listening to what message Draghi -- the head of the central bank for the 19 nations that use the euro currency -- may send. Three years ago, Draghi signaled in a speech at Jackson Hole that the central bank was preparing to begin buying bonds to keep borrowing rates low and support an anemic European recovery. If not now, then sometime soon, Draghi is expected to signal that the central bank is preparing to start reducing those purchases.

Draghi might choose to wait until the European Central Bank meets next month to communicate any policy shift, in part out of concern that the euro's value has already risen in anticipation of a central bank move and thereby made European exports costlier. In relation to the euro's activity, import prices have fallen, further depressing inflation and complicating the central bank's mission. In the 12 months ending in July, annual inflation in the eurozone was 1.3 percent, well below the target of just below 2 percent.

Such subpar inflation, along with lackluster growth, has hampered policymakers in the United States, Europe and Japan throughout the recovery from the 2008 financial crisis.

"It is a problem in the United Kingdom, in Germany, in Japan," said Diane Swonk, chief economist at DS Economics. "Nobody knows where inflation is going."

Besides assessing possible asset bubbles and undesirably low inflation, another discussion point will likely emerge at this year's conference -- at least on the sidelines: whether Yellen, the first woman to lead the U.S. central bank, will be attending her last Jackson Hole conference as Fed chairman.

Yellen's four-year term as chairman will end in February, and Trump has made clear he is considering replacing her, though he hasn't ruled out asking her to remain. One candidate the president has mentioned is Gary Cohn, a former Goldman Sachs senior executive who leads Trump's National Economic Council.

In a survey released this week of 184 economists who belong to the National Association of Business Economists, only 17 percent said they expected Yellen to be renominated. Nearly half said they thought Trump would tap Cohn.

Not everyone is convinced that Cohn -- who, unlike the three most recent Fed chairmen, doesn't have a doctorate in economics -- even wants the job.

"Cohn is a very smart and competent businessman," said Sung Won Sohn, an economics professor at California State University-Channel Islands. "But does he really want to go into the cultural environment that is the Federal Reserve?"

Business on 08/25/2017

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