WASHINGTON—Federal Reserve (the Fed) officials were almost ready to raise interest rates in September, but held off because of China’s economic slowdown and its potential to derail US growth and inflation.
Minutes of the September 16 and 17 discussions released on Thursday showed the central bank believed the time for the first Fed rate increase in nine years “might be near.”
However policy-makers decided to wait for evidence that the economy had not weakened and that inflation would gradually move back toward the Fed’s 2-percent annual target. Some members also expressed concerns that a premature rate hike could harm the central bank’s credibility.
“Simply put, the Fed still doesn’t have enough confidence that the economy will remain strong enough to return inflation to the target to begin the tightening process,” said Sal Guatieri, senior economist at BMO Capital Markets.
The September meeting had been preceded by weeks of speculation over whether the Fed would vote to raise rates. Fed Chairman Janet Yellen told reporters at a news conference following the meeting that a rate hike was still likely this year, a prediction she repeated two weeks ago during a speech in Massachusetts.
But since then, the government has released economic data that could give the Fed officials further pause.
Employers added just 142,000 jobs in September, and officials lowered their estimate of job gains in July and August by a combined 59,000. That left monthly job growth at a mediocre 167,000 in the July-to-September
period, down from 231,000 in the previous quarter.
Many economists believe the weak jobs report has eliminated the possibility of a rate hike at the next meeting in October. Some think the Fed could end up waiting until next year to begin raising rates.
The Fed’s two final meetings of this year will take place on October 27 and 28 and December 15 and 16.
“I believe the jobs report makes an October rate hike out of the question, but if we have some strong employment reports before the December meeting, then a case could still be made from a December rate increase,” said Sung Won Sohn, an economics professor at the Martin Smith School of Business at California State University.
The Fed has kept its benchmark rate at a record low near zero since December 2008. It has not raised rates since June 2006.
The minutes showed the Fed officials were concerned that “a material slowdown in economic growth in China and potential adverse spillovers to other economies were likely to depress US net exports to some extent.” These developments have sent the dollar up in value, which could hurt US exports and push oil prices lower.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) on Tuesday predicted that China’s slowdown and tumbling commodity prices will push global economic growth this year to the lowest level since the recession year 2009. In an updated outlook, the IMF said the world economy will grow 3.1 percent this year, down from a July forecast of 3.3 percent and from 3.4 percent growth last year.
China’s economy has slowed for four straight years—from 10.6 percent in 2010 to 7.4 percent last year
A stronger dollar and lower oil prices would make it harder for the Fed to achieve its inflation target. Inflation has run below 2 percent for more than three years, rising by just 1.3 percent in the most recent 12 months.
The minutes of the Fed’s September meeting showed that some officials worried that if the Fed raised rates in September and economic conditions worsened, it could harm the central bank’s credibility by calling into question its commitment to its inflation target.