Fed Pledges Low Rates for Years, and Until Inflation Picks Up

WASHINGTON — Federal Reserve officials expect to leave interest rates near zero for years — through at least 2023 — as they try to coax the economy back to full strength in the wake of the pandemic-induced recession, based on their September policy statement and economic projections released Wednesday.

The announcement, which also reinforced the central bank’s August pledge to tolerate slightly higher price gains to offset periods of weak inflation, underscores that Chair Jerome H. Powell and his colleagues plan to be extraordinarily patient as they try to cushion the economy in the months and years ahead.

The policy setting Federal Open Market Committee “expects it will be appropriate to maintain this target range until labor market conditions have reached levels consistent with the Committee’s assessments of maximum employment and inflation has risen to 2 percent and is on track to moderately exceed 2 percent for some time,” officials said in their statement.

The Fed slashed interest rates to near zero almost exactly 6 months ago, as the pandemic first swept the United States and markets tiptoed on the brink of disaster. Such low interest rates help to spur economic growth by encouraging home refinancing, business investment and other types of borrowing. While investors and economists expect borrowing costs to remain at rock-bottom for years, Fed officials declaration that they will wait for inflation to actually heat up before adjusting policy should make that outlook even more concrete.

Cutting the funds rate is not the only tool in the Fed’s arsenal — the central bank is also buying huge quantities of mortgage-backed and Treasury securities. The primary goal of those purchases has been to stabilize markets, but bond-buying can help to stimulate the economy by pushing down longer-term interest rates. It can also prod investors to move into riskier assets with higher payoffs, driving them toward corporate bonds and stocks.

Fed officials are mulling when and how to update their asset purchase program, and said Wednesday that they will maintain purchases at “at least” their current pace to “sustain smooth market functioning and help foster accommodative financial conditions.”

The Fed updated its Summary of Economic Projections, a set of estimates for how the economy and interest rates will develop in coming years. Officials saw unemployment ending 2020 at a lower rate: The median official expects the rate to average 7.6 percent over the final three months of the year, compared to 9.3 percent when the Fed released its last set of projections in June.

That change came after the jobless rate declined from 14.7 percent in April to 8.4 percent in August, a faster drop than most economists had expected. The median Fed official does not expect interest rates to climb higher through the end of the 2023, the projections showed, and sees inflation returning to 2 percent only that year.

In August, Mr. Powell announced that the Fed was shifting its policy strategy, and no longer planned to lift interest rates simply because the unemployment rate had dropped below levels it saw as sustainable. Officials also said they would adopt an average inflation target, aiming for 2 percent over time rather than as an absolute goal — implying that the Fed will sometimes allow price increases to run slightly higher.

The September statement backed up that move.

“The Committee will aim to achieve inflation moderately above 2 percent for some time so that inflation averages 2 percent over time and longer-term inflation expectations remain well anchored at 2 percent,” the Fed said Wednesday. Previously, it had pledged to aim for 2 percent inflation on a “symmetric” basis, meaning one that is equally unsatisfied if inflation runs above or below the target.

“The Committee expects to maintain an accommodative stance of monetary policy until these outcomes are achieved,” the new statement said.

Two officials, Robert S. Kaplan from the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas and Neel Kashkari from the Minneapolis Fed, voted against Wednesday’s decision. Mr. Kaplan favored retaining greater flexibility about future rate setting — suggesting that he didn’t want to tie interest rates so closely to real-life inflation outcomes, giving the Fed more flexibility to raise rates earlier.

Mr. Kashkari took the opposite tack. He wanted the committee “to indicate that it expects to maintain the current target range until core inflation has reached 2 percent on a sustained basis,” which would argue for a longer period of very-low rates.

The Fed is trying to stabilize inflation, which has slipped lower over recent decades along with sustainable growth and interest rates.

Nudging price gains slightly higher would buy Fed officials more room to stimulate the economy in bad times, since rates incorporate inflation. A little bit of inflation is also thought to grease the wheels of the economy, giving employers room to pass along price increases and raise wages.

Mr. Powell will answer questions from the news media after the meeting at 2:30 p.m. on Wednesday.

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