Published: 10:30, September 20, 2024 | Updated: 12:53, September 20, 2024
Biden expects Fed to continue cutting interest rates
By Reuters
US President Joe Biden speaks at the Economic Club of Washington, DC, on Sept 19, 2024. (PHOTO / AFP)

WASHINGTON - US President Joe Biden said on Thursday he expects the Federal Reserve to continue cutting interest rates and vowed that his administration would keep working to lower costs for Americans.

Biden used an Economic Club of Washington event with 500 guests to promote his administration's policies to bring down inflation after the COVID-19 pandemic and the conflict in Ukraine, issues that have driven voters' anxiety.

"Interest rates are going to be coming down and they're expected to go down further. That's a good place for us to be," the president said.

Inflation is much closer to the Fed's 2 percent target, Biden said, calling the US central bank's half-percentage-point cut in interest rates on Wednesday "good news for consumers".

"I'm not here to take a victory lap ... We do have more work to do," Biden added.

ALSO READ: US Fed slashes rates by 50 basis points, first rate cut in four years

This AFP graphic dated Sept 19, 2024 shows the chart of the changes in the benchmark interest rates of the United States Federal Reserve since 2000.

Many economists had predicted a recession would be needed to lower high inflation, but have so far been proven wrong as Biden's policies aimed at expanding domestic manufacturing, investing in clean energy and other infrastructure, and capping drug costs for seniors helped create 16 million jobs and raised wages, Jeff Zients, the president's chief of staff, told reporters in a call.

Polls show Americans remain deeply worried about the economy and inflation, with Vice-President Kamala Harris, who became the Democratic presidential nominee when Biden bowed out of the race in July, and Republican former president Donald Trump essentially deadlocked less than seven weeks before the Nov 5 US election.

A Reuters/Ipsos poll released this week showed Trump had an advantage on the issue of inflation, which surged under Biden to a 40-year high in 2022. Some 43 percent of voters in the poll said Trump would be more likely to "lower prices for everyday things like groceries and gas", compared with 36 percent who picked Harris.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell, speaking on Wednesday after the US central bank announced its oversized rate cut, said the economy remained strong but policymakers wanted to stay ahead of and stave off any weakening in the job market. The unemployment rate, now at 4.2 percent, is more than half a percentage point higher than it was when the Fed began an aggressive rate-hike campaign in March of 2022.

A shopper picks up his package of bacon while shopping for food items at a grocery store on Aug 14, 2024 in Rosemead, California. (PHOTO / AFP)
A completed planned development is seen in Ashburn, Virginia, on Aug 14, 2024. (PHOTO / AFP)

National Economic Council Director Lael Brainard said on the same call with reporters that the Fed's rate cut sent a "clear signal that inflation has come back down", noting that it was now at the same level seen in the month before the COVID-19 pandemic began.

Mortgage rate reductions that have already happened would save the average home buyer $5,000 a year, with savings to increase as the rates declined further, she said.

But Brainard added that further work was needed to drive down housing costs and support childcare needs.

READ MORE: US Fed expected to deliver quarter-percentage-point rate cut next week

The White House is monitoring escalating tensions in the Middle East, but sees no significant risks to the broader economic outlook, said an administration official, who did not wish to be named.