By Michael S. Derby
May 3 (Reuters) – Minneapolis Federal Reserve Bank President Neel Kashkari said on Sunday that the longer the war with Iran continues, the greater the risks of higher inflation and economic damage, all of which limits the guidance the central bank should provide on rate policy at this time.
In an appearance on the CBS television show “Face the Nation,” Kashkari said he was “very focused” on the Iran war and its impact on inflation and economic demand amid the ongoing closure of the Strait of Hormuz, a bottleneck for 20% of the world’s oil and gas supply.
The war, which began when US President Donald Trump and Israel launched airstrikes against Iran on February 28, has caused a massive rise in energy prices around the world and worsened the poor inflation environment in the United States.
Given the risks and uncertainty surrounding all aspects of the war, Kashkari said the Federal Reserve might even have to raise rates.
“I don’t feel comfortable pointing out that a rate cut is on the cards. You know, we could be in worse scenarios, we could have to go in the other direction,” he said.
Kashkari was part of an unusually large dissident wave at the most recent meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee, voting against language the institution used in its monetary policy statement.
FED DISSENTS
The Federal Reserve on Wednesday held its target interest rate range steady at 3.5% to 3.75% and withheld language indicating that officials still collectively viewed the central bank’s next move “as a rate cut.”
Kashkari was joined by leaders of the Cleveland and Dallas regional Federal Reserve Banks against that guidance. Another Federal Reserve official, Governor Stephen Miran, dissented in favor of a rate cut.
The Fed’s three regional dissidents supported keeping rates steady and in later comments said interest rates may need to rise or fall depending on how the war affects the economy.
The Federal Reserve traditionally looks at things like energy price shocks as they generally subside, but some officials have noted that the current problems come on top of years of inflation that overshoots the Fed’s target.
That means the central bank might have to raise rates to contain inflation. At the same time, however, large increases in energy also depress demand by hurting consumers’ ability to spend. That, in turn, could cause the Federal Reserve to hold rates steady or even cut rates in an attempt to protect the labor market.
In a television appearance Saturday, Chicago Federal Reserve President Austan Goolsbee called the latest U.S. inflation data “bad news.” Against the Federal Reserve’s 2% target, headline inflation as measured by the personal consumption expenditures price index rose 3.5% year over year in March.