Most FOMC Participants See No Rate Hike Till 2014

Most of the 17 Federal Reserve bank presidents and Federal Reserve Board members believe rates should and will stay near zero until 2014, with few expecting rates to rise before then, according to projected policy paths released by the Fed Wednesday.

Seven members see 2014 as the right time to raise rates, three believe rates should go up this year, three see next year as right, and four see rates holding until 2015.

When talking specific numbers, 14 members expect rates to stay near zero this year, with one expecting a rise to 0.50%, one projecting 1% as the right policy and one suggesting a 1.25% rate.

Next year, a few more believe an increase would be appropriate, with 11 calling for rates near zero, one calling for a 0.75% rate, two saying 1% would be appropriate, one looking at 1.25% and two suggesting 1.75% would be right.

Members are more spread in opinion for 2014, with four still looking at near-zero rates, three at 0.50%, two at 1%, one at 1.50%, two at 2%, one at 2.25%, three at 2.50% and one at 2.75%.

Projections of the central tendency of economic growth by the panel were generally higher than in January for this year, but lower in the next two years and the same for long-term.

Panelists cut their projections for unemployment. Again, long-term projections for unemployment remained the same.

Inflation outlooks were raised slightly, with projections now calling for inflation up to 2.0% (headline and core) each of the three years and long-term as well.

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