Yellen sees no U.S. recession, says Fed won't cut in 2019

The U.S. economy isn’t likely to slip into recession anytime soon, and there is no reason for the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates, former Fed Chair Janet Yellen said.

Speaking to an investor conference in Fort Worth, Texas, on Thursday, Yellen said that while Fed officials had marked down their economic growth forecasts to a median of 2.1% for 2019, “that’s not a recession. A slowdown is something that was long expected.”

Former Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen
Janet Yellen, chair of the U.S. Federal Reserve, speaks during a Senate Banking Committee hearing in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Thursday, July 13, 2017. Yellen said yesterday the U.S. economy should continue to expand over the next few years, allowing the central bank to keep raising interest rates, while also stressing a gradual approach to tightening as the Fed monitors too-low inflation. Photographer: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg

“They are comfortable with the current level of rates. They’re prepared to move in either direction depending on how things play out,” Yellen said. “But my baseline is I don’t see a recession, I don’t think it’s likely. And I expect them to stay on hold during the year.”

Yellen said Fed officials have “been looking to engineer something of a slowdown” because the labor market is “really quite tight.”

A closely watched segment of the yield curve inverted last week, with yields on three-month bills rising above those on 10-year Treasuries for the first time since 2007. An inverted yield curve has preceded U.S. recessions in the past.

New York Fed President John Williams, one of the U.S. central bank’s top policy makers, also downplayed fears of recession risks being signaled by bond markets.

“There’s a lot of reasons to think that it has been a recession predictor for reasons in the past that kind of don’t apply today,” he said Thursday.

Yellen said the inverted yield curve may be based on fear the central bank would tighten too much and bring on a recession. Fed officials “paid attention” to what markets were telling them in December, and “you’ve seen a downward shift in the path of interest rates that responds to that outlook.”

There are reasons to be concerned about growth in Europe and China, Yellen said, and “if there are downside surprises there, the Fed would be quite prepared to cut. It’s by no means locked in stone that interest rates will stay where they are now. But I think it would be a surprise. It’s not what I expect.”

Yellen said she’s more concerned about disinflation than inflation at this point. A slowing rate has been weighing on inflation expectation, “and in a world of low interest rates, it’s not a good thing to have inflation expectations slip.”

Still, should growth pick up, the Fed would also be prepared to tighten more, Yellen said, “but to tighten more I think it would be necessary to see some upside surprise to inflation. Inflation has simply been so tame, so controlled that I don’t see any reason for the Fed to tighten.”

Bloomberg News
Monetary policy Janet Yellen Federal Reserve FOMC
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