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While leaders Powell and Clarida see a growing case for accommodation, Kashkari, Bullard say the need for a rate cut is already here.
June 21 -
The St. Louis Fed's James Bullard and the San Francisco Fed's Mary Daly said economic conditions may justify lower interest rates.
June 3 -
The latest slip in inflation will likely be short-lived and interest rates could stay where they are “for some time.”
May 22 -
Change is always difficult, and the Federal Reserve’s attempt to find a better monetary policy framework is no exception.
May 6 -
The April employment report topped estimates for jobs created, while the jobless rate fell to a 49-year low; wage increases missed projections.
May 3 -
The Federal Open Market Committee needs to be careful because the market expects low inflation and the yield curve remains quite flat, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis President James Bullardsaid late Thursday.
February 8 -
Given that inflation has been below the Federal Open Market’s stated 2% target on an annual basis each year since 2012, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis President James Bullard said Thursday monetary policy might be “too hawkish.”
January 10 -
The president of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis said he’s concerned that any more interest-rate increases could push the U.S. economy into a recession.
January 9 -
A modernized version of the Taylor rule suggests keeping the fed funds rate target near current levels through 2021, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis President James Bullard said Thursday.
October 18 -
The better-than-expected growth rates in the U.S. economy are set to dissipate unless productivity picks up, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis President James Bullard said.
October 9