Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, in an interview published Thursday, suggested he isn’t sure how President Donald Trump’s trade battles are going to turn out.
But Powell told Marketplace’s Kai Ryssdal that business contacts across the US have raised alarm about Trump’s trade policy to the 12 Federal Reserve branches.
“And we are hearing a rising level of concern about the effects of changes in trade policy,” Powell said.
Recent reports from the 12 Fed branches reflect Powell’s statements. Manufacturers in both the Kansas City Fed’s and the Dallas Fed’s most recent manufacturing surveys showed growing anxiety among businesses about Trump’s steel and aluminum tariffs. In the latest Federal Open Markets Committee meeting minutes, a slew of members relayed concerns.
In the interview, Powell declined to forecast the exact economic effects of Trump’s recent tariffs, but he did express support for lower trade barriers in general.
“The truth is this: Since War II we’ve had this trading system develop, and consistently tariffs have come down and trade has grown,” Powell said. “And I think that’s served the global economy, and particularly the United States economy, very well.”
Trump has said his goal is to move toward a world with no tariffs or trade barriers. But given the lack of a clear plan to get to that point and a policy that is moving the US in the opposite direction, such a resolution appears distant.
Powell said that if Trump’s trade barriers stay in place for an extended period of time, as most trade experts expect, there would be a price to pay.
“If it works out other ways, so that we wind up having high tariffs on a lot of products and a lot of traded goods and services, let’s say, and that they become sustained for a long period of time, then yes, that could be be a negative for our economy,” Powell said.
The Fed chair also laid out a worst-case scenario: stagflation.
“I wouldn’t want to, you know, dive into a bunch of hypotheticals here, but I would say, you can imagine situations which would be very challenging, where inflation is going up and the economy is weakening,” Powell said.
Inflation typically increases in a strong economy, where workers are demanding higher wages because of a strong labor markets and companies are forced to raise prices to make up for the increases cost of workers. In a stagflation scenario, inflation increases in a weak economy where workers are losing jobs.
In a scenario in which the trade war becomes prolonged, businesses may be forced to increase the cost of goods to compensate. At the same time, businesses may not want to hire or invest in improvements because of uncertainty caused by a trade war, meaning inflation goes up while the economy gets weaker.
That would leave the Federal Reserve in a pickle. The central bank is, in theory, supposed to hike rates to combat high inflation but cut rates to boost a weak economy.