(Reuters) – The Federal Reserve’s new pledge to keep interest rates at zero until inflation is on track to “moderately” exceed 2% has come under fire for being overly vague and leaving too much up to U.S. central bankers’ judgment, but that’s exactly the point, a key author of the pledge said on Wednesday.
“Moderate isn’t a number…it’s a guardrail” against expectations that the Fed would tolerate very high or persistently high inflation, New York Fed President John Williams said at a virtual conference held by the Hoover Institution. “It’s also about proportionality; if we are undershooting the target by a few tenths… then you are obviously thinking that that’s the proportionality that you are thinking about in terms of trying to get that balance of 2%, but it is specific to the circumstances,” and where the economy is.
(Reporting by Ann Saphir; Editing by Leslie Adler)