Over his first term in office, Jerome Powell became arguably the most dovish chairman in the Federal Reserve’s modern history, giving priority to full employment in an era in which inflation seemed extinct. In his second term he may have to execute the reverse: giving priority to inflation at the risk of sacrificing jobs.

The pivot could be painful for both Mr. Powell and President Biden, who reappointed him in part on his dovish record, and reflects the substantial reordering of economic conditions in just the past year. Inflation, at 6.2%, is its highest in 31 years. While employment remains 4.2 million below its pre-pandemic peak, labor shortages are widespread and wage growth is accelerating. All that threatens the Fed’s 2% inflation target.

This post first appeared on wsj.com

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Multiple people injured in shooting at Oxford High School in Michigan, officials say

Multiple people were injured in a shooting Tuesday at Oxford High School…

Live updates: TikTok CEO testifies to Congress as scrutiny mounts on the Chinese-owned app

TikTok live updates: CEO faces Congress as the U.S. considers banning the…

Twitter’s New Head of Trust and Safety Says Platform Wants to Move Quickly

Tech Recent content decisions under Elon Musk show strategy of swift decisions…

Peabody, Coronado End Talks Over $6 Billion Deal

Business The discussions had been seen as an indication of how the…