Greenspan raises US rates

13 April 2012

WITH THE US economy moving ahead and the nation's payrolls picking up, Federal Reserve policymakers boosted short-term interest rates for a third time this year - the last chance to do so before the November Preseidential election in six weeks.

Fed chairman Alan Greenspan and his Federal Open Market Committee colleagues - the group that sets interest-rate policy - increased the federal funds rate from 1.5% to 1.75%.

The funds rate is the interest banks charge each other on overnight loans and is the Fed's primary tool for influencing economic activity.

Reacting to the Fed's decision, Wells Fargo said it was increasing the prime lending rate for many short-term consumer and business loans from 4.5% to 4.75%. Other commercial banks are expected to follow.

The Fed said the economy - which slowed earlier this year partly because of soaring energy prices - now 'appears to have regained some traction'. That echoed a comment Greenspan made to Congress earlier this month.

In an encouraging note, the Fed said, 'Labour market conditions have improved modestly.' That was a better assessment than the Fed offered in August, when it said job market improvements had slowed.

'The Fed is sending a message of relative comfort with the current condition of the economy,' said Lynn Reaser, chief economist at Bank of America Capital Management. 'They suggested we are pulling out of the soft patch.'

The Fed's rate increase comes with Election Day just six weeks away. President George W Bush and his Democratic rival, John Kerry, hold widely divergent views on the health of the economy and the jobs market.

Incumbent politicians normally are unhappy if the Fed raises interest rates close to an election. Yet, some economists said that by raising rates, the Fed could be viewed as appearing comfortable about the pace of the economy's expansion, which could be seen as good for the Bush campaign.

Other economists said that if the Fed had dropped its gradual rate-raising approach and unexpectedly passed on a rate increase in September, it might have looked politically motivated.

'I think what they needed to do so close to the election is not stray from the path that they had set out,' said Carl Tannenbaum, chief economist at LaSalle Bank. 'Maintaining their course for rates is the wisest thing to do both economically and politically.'

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