Inflation Still ‘Too High’ To Consider Cutting Interest Rates, Fed Chair Says

Chairman of the Federal Reserve Jerome Powell hinted that more interest rate hikes may be coming during a speech in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, on Friday.

Powell along with other central bank officials and finance and economics experts met for the annual Jackson Hole Economic Symposium last week to discuss the state of the economy and the Federal Reserve’s efforts to curb inflation. He said the U.S. may not have hit its interest rate peak yet.

“We have tightened policy significantly over the past year. Although inflation has moved down from its peak — a welcome development — it remains too high,” Powell said, according to a transcript of his remarks. “We are prepared to raise rates further if appropriate, and intend to hold policy at a restrictive level until we are confident that inflation is moving sustainably down toward our objective.”

In order to rein in inflation to the Federal Reserve’s 2% target rate, the central bank has hiked the federal funds rate to 5.5%, the highest rate in over two decades. The Fed has also used its economic levers to pull money out of circulation in order to tamp down on economic activity and slow inflation. Despite its efforts, the economy continues to hum faster than expected, Powell said.

“So far this year, GDP growth has come in above expectations and above its longer-run trend, and recent readings on consumer spending have been especially robust. In addition, after decelerating sharply over the past 18 months, the housing sector is showing signs of picking back up,” the chairman said. “Additional evidence of persistently above-trend growth could put further progress on inflation at risk and could warrant further tightening of monetary policy.”

Powell’s uncertainty about the future of the American economy was seconded by other top central bank officials and experts at the conference.

Kristin Forbes, a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, said that the Fed’s current position is similar to a hiker attempting to summit a mountain when the trail has disappeared.

“You know where you want to go. You know where the summit is, but there are no more markers and you have to feel your way,” Forbes told The Wall Street Journal. “And even though you’ve covered most of the distance, that can be the hardest part. It’s steeper. It’s rockier.”

Cleveland Fed President Loretta Mester said the central bank is close, but it may need to raise interest rates at least one more time before it hits the peak.

“We are very close to a good point, and then we’ll let the economy tell us” when interest rates can start to come back down again, she told WSJ.

Law Group Sues National Archives Demanding Federal Agency Turn Over 5,400 Biden Pseudonym Emails

The National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) is being sued to turn over approximately 5,400 emails connected to then-Vice President Joe Biden’s pseudonym accounts to forward government information and business with his son, Hunter Biden, and others.

Southeastern Legal Foundation (SLF) filed a federal lawsuit against the agency on Monday after NARA officials confirmed with other sources that Biden used three personal pseudonym email accounts under the names Robin Ware, Robert L. Peters, and JRB Ware but has since “dragged its feet and still has not produced a single email,” the law group said in a news release.

“All too often, public officials abuse their power by using it for their personal or political benefit,” Kimberly Hermann, general counsel for the legal foundation, said. “When they do, many seek to hide it. The only way to preserve governmental integrity is for NARA to release Biden’s nearly 5,400 emails to SLF and thus the public. The American public deserves to know what is in them.”

The group identified thousands of potentially responsive records from NARA after submitting a Freedom of Information Act request in June in its latest effort to investigate allegations that Biden communicated with Hunter regarding his foreign business dealings dating back to 2017.

SLF attorneys first asked the federal agency to release Biden’s emails in 2021. However, NARA officials reportedly failed to comply, claiming it did not have custody of his records before January 2017 and could only make the emails public in January 2022.

“Public transparency is the most vital check the citizens have for holding our political class accountable,” Braden Boucek, litigation director for SLF, said. “After over a year of trying to work with NARA, its continued unreasonable delays have forced SLF to file this lawsuit.”

The lawsuit comes after House Republicans began looking into President Biden’s alleged use of a fake name to mask his identity as they ramp up an investigation into the first family.

Oversight Chairman James Comer (R-KY) sent a letter to NARA requesting all unredacted records and communications regarding Biden’s official duties as vice president that overlapped Hunter’s activities with Ukrainian energy company Burisma Holdings, which employed the then-vice president’s son on its board for several years. The lucrative arrangement has drawn scrutiny by investigators in addition to other foreign business ventures. Joe Biden served as vice president from January 2009 to January 2017.

In particular, Comer said he seeks documents in which the elder Biden allegedly used a pseudonym; his son’s former business partners Hunter Biden, Eric Schwerin, or Devon Archer are copied; and all drafts of then-Vice President Biden’s speech delivered to Ukraine’s parliament in December 2015.

“The Committee is concerned that foreign nationals have sought access and influence by engaging in lucrative business relationships with high-profile political figures’ immediate family members, including members of the Biden family,” Comer wrote.

A NARA spokesperson told The Daily Wire that the agency received the request and will respond in accordance with the requirements of the Presidential Records Act.

Daniel Chaitin contributed to this report.

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