Doomsayers are wrong (so far) as U.S. Fed raises rates: Don Pittis - Action News
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Doomsayers are wrong (so far) as U.S. Fed raises rates: Don Pittis

Finally we can stop being terrified of a quarter-point increase in interest rates by the U.S. Federal Reserve. That's because it is now behind us. After a few small gyrations, the world went on just as before. Don Pittis says breaking the ice on frozen rates was the best thing the Fed chair could do.

Breaking the ice on frozen rates has calmed markets, not roiled them

U.S. Federal Reserve chair Janet Yellen oozed confidence as she announced a hike in interest rates yesterday. Markets responded in kind. (Reuters)

"Remember, we have very low rates and we've made a very small move."

With those words, U.S. Federal Reserve chair Janet Yellen meant to reassure ordinary Americans that yesterday's quarter-point hikeininterest rates, labelled "historic" after seven years nearzero, was really nothing much to worry about.

With everyone from Harvard's Larry Summers, toIMF boss Christine Lagarde to the Financial Timeswarning of the economic risk of raising rates, it appears that, so far at least,Yellen'sreassuring words were effective farbeyond Main Street, extending tofinancialmarkets around the world.

Ifthere are economistswho think interest rates should stay at zero forever, I've never met them. So the issue was not whether rates should rise, but when.

With almost two years in the job as head of the world's most powerful central bank, Yellenwas able to present a calm and rational case for why the Fed did have to move now.

Calming effect

As some predicted earlier this year,the announcement of a rise in rates was far more soothing than the speculation and doomsaying that came before.

Challenged at yesterday's news conference by a reporter who quipped central banks often kill off periods of economic growth by raising rates,Yellen had a confident response. She said the reason that sometimes happened was that central banks moved too late, allowing inflation to get out of control.

"At that point they've had to [raise interest rates] very abruptly and very substantially," saidYellen. "And it has caused a downturn, and the downturn has served to lower inflation."

She said that by making a small move now while inflation was low and thenincreasing rates gradually as needed, the Fed could keep the economy growing whilepreventinga boom and bust cycle.
Even if U.S. interest rate hikes are gradual, Canada's property and oil industries could eventually feel the effect. (CBC)

The Fed chair and her team of advisers are confident that the current interest rates will allow the economy to grow. But she expectsthis is just the first in a series of increases in Fedrates, rising from the 0.25 per cent range today to more than three per cent by 2018. And thoughgradual, those increases will have an effect, including on Canadians.

Now that Yellen has made this first move,Canadian homeowners and other borrowers must consider the prospect that some interest rates may rise by as much as three percentage points over the next three years.

Janet Yellen, zombie killer

Those gradual rate rises are also likely to have an effect on companies worldwide that have become over-dependent on debt. They are sometimes called zombies, because low interest rates allow them to continue to operatelonger after a normal market would have killed them off.

Inevitably suchfirms, including over-extended small oil-drillers in the United States, will go out of business. While that will be painful for the individuals involved, a growing economy will be able make better use of those resources currently being used to flood the world with more unwantedoil, aiding an oil price recovery.

As a growing U.S. economy begins to use up its supplies of labour and capital, it will begin looking to its neighbours.

Yellen has said before and made clear yesterday, an American economy where interest rates have to rise is good for both U.S. citizens and the world. That is because rates will only rise when the U.S. central bank sees signs that inflation and the demand for labour are continuing to rise.

Exports may be weak, she said, but the U.S. domestic economy is showing signs of life with consumer spending and house-building on the rise.

10% chanceof a shock

While Yellenexpressedconfidence in the U.S. economy, saying there was no sign the current growth phase would "die of old age," she doesn't have a crystal ball. She acknowledged that some unpredictable economic shock could come and knock the U.S. economy off track. In fact, she said, there was something in the order ofa 10 per cent chance of that happening.

She even followed the lead of Bank of Canada governor Stephen Poloz and mentioned the possibility of negative interest rates if things got really bad, although she did not foresee using them.

For central bankers, the only tried and trueway of dealingwith a major economic shock is to lower interest rates, something difficult to do when rates are already at zero. And that, she said, is another good reason to start increasingrates sooner rather than later.

"One factor that we've talked about is the desirability of having some scope to respond to an adverse shock to the economy by lowering the federal funds rate,"said Yellen."It would be nice to have a buffer in terms of having raised [rates] to a certain extent to give us some meaningful scope to respond."

Follow Don on Twitter@don_pittis

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