When Federal Reserve Chairwoman
Janet Yellen
concludes her last policy meeting Wednesday, she will leave her successor the challenge of deciding whether to pick up the pace of rate increases to prevent the economy from overheating.
Fed governor
Jerome Powell,
who is likely to be sworn in as chairman Monday, will have to weigh how closely to stick with Ms. Yellen’s approach of very gradually raising interest rates from still-low levels.
Mr. Powell’s choices could shape how history remembers Ms. Yellen’s four-year term as chief.
If he moves too slowly, low borrowing costs risk fueling an asset bubble like those that triggered recessions in 2001 and 2007.
Alternately, her record could be tarnished if inflation continues to limp below the central bank’s 2% target, confounding the Fed’s forecasts and damaging officials’ credibility.
The Fed is likely to leave its benchmark short-term rate unchanged Wednesday in a range between 1.25% and 1.5%. Officials are sure to discuss at the meeting how much the recent tax cuts are apt to spur economic growth and inflation, given that unemployment is at a 17-year low.
They also will consider the economic boost likely to come from the recent decline in the U.S. dollar, rise in stock prices and solid global growth.
Fed officials want inflation to rise to 2%, a level they view as healthy for an expanding economy, but they don’t want it to surge out of control. Policy makers have penciled in three quarter-percentage-point rate increases this year. But if they expect the tax cut to raise domestic demand without expanding the labor force or lifting workers’ productivity, which could fuel a burst of inflation, they might want to raise interest rates more.
The Fed held short-term rates near zero from late 2008 until late 2015. Under Ms. Yellen, who became chairwoman in February 2014, officials raised the benchmark federal-funds rate five times, most recently in December. In October, the Fed started shrinking its more than $4 trillion portfolio of bonds purchased to stimulate the economy by lowering long-term rates.
“She guided us through an exit strategy that wasn’t straightforward,” said Boston Fed President
Eric Rosengren
in an interview. “We are the only central bank in the world that has successfully started the reduction” in the bond portfolio.
When Ms. Yellen became chairwoman, Fed officials were anxious to avoid a repeat of the so-called taper tantrum, the market turbulence triggered by then-Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke’s comments in May 2013 suggesting the Fed might soon slow its asset purchases.
The episode hung over many of Ms. Yellen policy moves as an example of the costs of imprecise communications during an unprecedented policy shift.
In each of her first three years as chairwoman, critics warned Ms. Yellen was risking excessive inflation by moving so slowly to raise borrowing costs. The Fed lifted rates just once in 2015 and once in 2016. Once she did start raising rates, other critics said the moves risked smothering the fitful economic recovery.
So far, neither outcome has materialized, which Ms. Yellen’s allies say vindicates her approach. “She held off when moving would have been a mistake, but she also correctly perceived when gradual liftoff could begin without great threat to the economy,” said
Daniel Tarullo,
who served as a Fed governor from 2009 until last April.
The portfolio unwinding involved more than a year of discussions, focusing as much on how to communicate the plan as on what it would entail. When it was announced and launched last year, markets shrugged.
Fed officials view the reaction as a major success because it could make those programs less controversial if they are needed in the next downturn.
Officials appear unlikely to change the process of reducing the holdings now.
After the taper tantrum, many expected the rest of the process of withdrawing economic stimulus “would be an utter nightmare,” said
Andrew Levin,
a Dartmouth College economist and former Fed adviser. “I’m not sure even the most optimistic person four or five years ago would have expected it would have gone this smoothly.”
President
Donald Trump
opted not to nominate Ms. Yellen for a second term as Fed chief, breaking with a 35-year precedent in which new presidents have offered a second term to the sitting Fed chairman regardless of party.
Still, in picking Mr. Powell, an ally of Mr. Bernanke and then Ms. Yellen during his 5½ years on the Fed’s board, Mr. Trump signaled his preference for an evolution rather than a revolution in monetary policy.
“There is strong consensus in the committee for the gradual approach that we’ve been pursuing, and governor Powell has been part of that consensus,” Ms. Yellen said at a December press conference.
History’s view of Ms. Yellen’s record will be shaped by how Mr. Powell manages two puzzles the Fed has wrestled with over the past year.
The first concerns inflation, which has confounded the central bank’s expectations by running below 2% despite low unemployment and solid economic growth. If price pressures never materialize, “people will say, ‘Why did she raise rates at all?’” said
Lewis Alexander,
chief U.S. economist at Nomura Securities.
The second centers on lofty prices for stocks, real estate and other assets. It remains to be seen whether the Fed’s recent efforts to beef up bank regulation will be enough to contain wider damage to the economy if new financial bubbles crop up.
Former Fed Chairman
Alan Greenspan
left office in 2006 on a cloud of praise, only to have his performance reassessed after the housing bust set off the 2008 financial crisis.
The history of monetary policy includes so many unforced errors that not making one is itself an accomplishment, wrote
John Cochrane,
an economist at Stanford University’s Hoover Institution, reflecting on Ms. Yellen’s record last November. “Not screwing up doesn’t earn you as big a place in history,” he said, “but perhaps it should.”
Write to Nick Timiraos at nick.timiraos@wsj.com