Election could delay Fed rate rise until December
Sun Jun 29, 2008 1:10pm EDT
By Alister Bull
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Federal Reserve may be hesitant to raise
interest rates ahead of the U.S. election in November, although there
is no hard evidence to support the widely held view that politics
influences monetary policy.
The Fed has raised rates in election years, as well as leaving them on
hold or cutting. As a result, there is no pattern to confirm the
strong sense that the central bank prefers to hold fire as Americans
go to the polls.
Nonetheless, economists say the case for rate increases would have to
be particularly convincing for the Fed to act.
"The Fed will want to be as low-key and invisible as possible and that
means the Fed will not want to change the funds rate ahead of the
election," said William Poole, who retired in March as president of
the St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank after a decade on the Fed's
rate-setting committee.
"But I believe that if there is a compelling case, the Fed will do
so," he said. "I do not believe the Fed will abstain from necessary
policy action because of the election."
Some see political calculations delaying Fed action until after the
November 4 presidential election to the central bank's first post-vote
policy meeting on December 16.
"We're facing an election, and the Fed usually tries to stay on the
sideline," said Henry Kaufman, a veteran observer of the U.S. economy
and former chief economist with Salomon Brothers in the 1970s and 1980s.
"I doubt whether the Federal Reserve will, as it is now structured,
have the strength within its voting power to say we're going to go up
50 basis points, 50 basis points, 50 basis points," Kaufman told
Reuters earlier this month, referring to the possibility of a series
of half-percent point moves.


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