/ Katrina Recovery |
|
|
|
||
|
New Orleans, Louisiana |
Customize | Make This Your Home Page | E-mail newsletters | MySpecialsDirect |
|
Home Local
News Eye
on Hurricanes Eye on Floodgates Katrina
Photos
National 4Editorials
Weather
Sports
Frank
Davis Entertainment
Medical
Blogs
Links on 4 I-News Action Report Recovery Podcasts AP Podcasts News
Videos Traffic Palm/PDA
Edition
Lottery Results Business
Digital Gumbo Forums Mackie
& Meg Home/Garden Food
Spirit
of Louisiana E-cards
Auto News News Feeds/RSS
|
Katrina may persuade Fed to end rate hikes
05:05 PM EDT on Sunday, September 18, 2005
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Conflicting economic risks that could emerge from
Hurricane Katrina are putting Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan
and his central bank colleagues in a challenging spot.
Latest news: Video, slideshows: Give, get help: External links:
Fallout from the disaster is expected to slow economic growth over the
rest of the year, perhaps persuading the Fed to suspend its campaign of
raising interest rates.
But a main argument for the Fed to stay the course is the concern that
high energy costs, made worse by the killer storm, could filter down and
affect the price of all kinds of things. Broader inflation could follow.
Policy-makers meet Tuesday to consider their next move on interest
rates. Many economists are betting they will lift an important
short-term benchmark by one-quarter of percentage point, to 3.75 percent.
It would be the 11th such increase since the Fed began to tighten credit
in June 2004.
Commercial banks would be expected to increase their prime lending rates
by a corresponding amount, to 6.75 percent. These rates are used for
many short-term consumer loans, including some credit cards and popular
home equity lines of credit.
If the Fed pushes rates up again this week, borrowing costs would reach
their highest level in four years.
"I think this is very, very tough for the Fed. There's also the
compassion issue. You run the risk of looking very callous by raising
rates," said Brandeis University economics professor Stephen Cecchetti.
When all the risks are weighed, though, Cecchetti predicts the Fed will
nudge rates higher.
Those in the rate-raising camp make this case: From an economic
standpoint, inflation is more dangerous now than is the threat of a
serious economic slowdown.
Other analysts say the prospects of a downturn are more of a risk. They
say the Fed should leave rates alone on Tuesday.
"I think the greater risk is that higher energy prices will cause
consumers to pull back, slowing overall economic growth," said economist
Kathleen Camilli, president of Camilli Economics. She is on the side of
those who think the Fed will leave rates unchanged at its meeting.
Whatever the fate of interest rates, there is agreement that the
hurricane shaping up as the costliest natural disaster in U.S. history
is causing uncertainty about the economic outlook. That is complicating
the Fed's job of keeping the economy and inflation on an even keel.
Before Katrina, it seemed certain the Fed would raise rates at the
September meeting. The idea of a pause cropped up among economists soon
after Katrina struck in late August.
Given more time to assess the situation and the economic fallout, many
analysts have returned to the rate-raising camp.
"Right after Katrina it looked like a no-brainer. Uncertainties about
where things were going as a result of Katrina would force the Fed to
pause. But since then, the idea of the Fed pausing is fading," said
Charles Dumas, chief economist for Lombard Street Research Ltd.
The economy is resilient and is expected to bounce back from what many
economists hope will be a temporary rough patch.
For now, Katrina is expected to reduce overall economic growth in the
second half of this year by as much as one percentage point.
High energy prices are seen crimping consumer and business spending,
vital ingredients for healthy economic activity. Hiring will slow. A
reduction of 400,000 jobs over the next four months is forecast.
President Bush wants Congress to approve a massive reconstruction
program for the Gulf Coast. The federal government's costs could reach
$200 billion or more. Congress already has approved $62 billion.
Rebuilding, once under way, should help energize overall economic
activity and the jobs climate, though probably not until next year.
There are mixed opinions on what the Fed will do on Nov. 1 and Dec. 13 -
the last scheduled meetings for this year.
Economists will scrutinize the Fed's brief statement, released after its
meeting Tuesday, for clues about the future course of interest rates.
The statement explains the Fed's action and assesses economic conditions.
|
Advertising |
|
|
|
||