Powell declined to comment about the timing of the rate move, but has previously said policy decisions would be made “meeting by meeting”.
However, he was among the Fed officials who last week began laying the groundwork for a rate cut, citing better than expected economic data and a greater awareness of the potential effects to the labour market if borrowing costs were kept too high for too long.
The US unemployment rate, while still historically low, has ticked up in recent months and hovers at 4.1%. But wage growth has slowed as monthly job gains have moderated, leading officials to frame the risks to the outlook as “two-sided”.
However, Powell on Monday said that a so-called hard landing, in which the unemployment rate jumps as inflation returns to target, is not the “most likely or a likely scenario”.
Asked about the trajectory for rates over the longer term, Powell said that the “neutral” rate - a level that neither stimulates nor suppresses growth - had probably risen, suggesting that rates would settle at a higher level than before the pandemic.
Written by: Colby Smith
© Financial Times