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Search resuls for: "Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas"


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The Federal Reserve is set to lose one of its more diligent skeptics when Esther George, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, retires next month. Ms. George began her tenure at the central bank 40 years ago in the midst of the last episode of very high U.S. inflation. She became the Kansas City Fed’s president in 2011, when the economy was mired in the protracted and difficult recovery from the global financial crisis.
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailFed could hike rates by 25 bps in next meetings if inflation moderates: ex-Kansas City Fed presidentThe Fed's next moves are "up in the air," says Thomas Hoenig, former president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, and the central bank could hike by 25 basis points or 50 basis points depending on whether inflation gets too hot.
Most of the inflation is behind us, and then the biggest threat is recession, not inflation, today. Jeremy Siegel Wharton professorOfficial data, which typically lags by a month, may not immediately show the changes happening in the real economy, he said. "Most of the inflation is behind us, and then the biggest threat is recession, not inflation, today." "I think that that is way, way too high — given the policy lags, that really would force a contraction," he said. "But my feeling is that when I look at sensitive commodity prices, asset prices, housing prices, even rental prices, I see declines, not increases," he said.
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