Fed officials discussed hiking rates to ‘restrictive’ level
WASHINGTON — Federal Reserve officials last month debated how high they should raise interest rates to achieve their economic goals, with some arguing that they might need to lift rates to a level that would modestly restrain growth.
In the end, the Fed modestly raised its key short-term rate and predicted that it would continue to gradually tighten credit to manage growth and inflation amid a steadily healthy job market and economy.
The discussion, revealed Wednesday in minutes of the Fed’s Sept. 25-26 policy meeting, showed that a few participants thought the Fed’s key rate would need to “become modestly restrictive for a time” to prevent inflation from climbing too high. Other officials said they would oppose a restrictive rate policy without clear signs of an overheating economy and rising inflation.
The minutes did not indicate that officials reached a conclusion. But they did show that all Fed officials favoured gradual rate increases.