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Fed's Lacker Argues Fed Should Raise Rates Soon

Richmond Fed President Jeffrey Lacker delivered a hawkish speech just minutes before today's nonfarm payrolls report

Digital Content Group
Sep 4, 2015 at 10:24 AM
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    RICHMOND, Va. (Reuters) - A top Federal Reserve official said on Friday he had seen enough healing in the U.S. labor market to warrant raising interest rates soon.

    Richmond Fed President Jeffrey Lacker, who had advocated for a rate hike in June and will have a vote at the Fed's Sept. 16-17 policy meeting, said the U.S. economy no longer needs interest rates near zero.

    "It's time to align our monetary policy with the significant progress we have made," Lacker said in prepared remarks titled "The Case Against Further Delay."

    Lacker 0904
    Jeffrey Lacker, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, participates in a session titled, "Help or Harm: Central Bank Monetary Policies at the Outer Limites" NABE Economic Policy Conference in Washington March 5, 2013. REUTERS/Yuri Gripas

    Lacker's comments came just minutes before the Labor Department was due to release its monthly employment report for August, which was expected to show robust job growth.

    Several Fed policymakers have said the report would be critical for the central bank's decision over whether to raise rates this month.

    But Lacker said the healing in the job market needed for a hike have already materialized, even if the jobs report disappointed.

    "It's quite unlikely that a one-month blip would materially alter the labor market picture or, for that matter, the monetary policy outlook," he said.

    Lacker said the strongest evidence supporting higher rates was that consumer spending had picked up substantially. This was probably the result of stronger earnings by families and expectations the economy would continue to improve.

    The labor market was probably already at full strength, he said, and there were already signs that wages could rise at a faster clip.

    "Over the last year or so, reports of difficulty finding and hiring qualified workers have become notably more widespread and persistent," he said, referring to reports in his region.

    Lacker said no discussion of the economy's state would be complete without considering recent volatility in financial markets.

    Worries over the strength of China's economy appear to have prompted the volatility, he said, but he noted that developments in China were unlikely to have a direct impact on U.S. economy.

    (Reporting by Jason Lange; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)
     

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