When Will the Fed Abandon Its Zero Bound Interest Rate?

 | Mar 02, 2015 12:29AM ET

Much of what I write about is food for thought. I take opposing positions on subjects when I agree generally on what was said - as want readers to understand there are exceptions or buts or legitimate concerns of those who have different views. Very few things are black or white.

Follow up:

from Business Insider :

The Federal Reserve is expected to raise interest rates this year for the first time since 2006.

And Brian Smedley, senior US rates strategist at Bank of America (NYSE:BAC) Merrill Lynch Global Research, thinks that when the Fed moves, it will hike rates way faster than the market currently expects.

In our latest most important charts in the world feature , Smedley included the following chart, showing the increase nonfarm payrolls topping the increase in the working population. For Smedley, this means the labor market is tighter than some might think.

"Labor market slack is diminishing rapidly," Smedley writes, "amid the strongest job growth since the late 1990s. Population growth has also slowed markedly since the last business cycle, leading to a faster reduction in unemployment for a given pace of net job creation. This sets the Fed up to hike rates at a faster pace over the next year than the front end of the rates curve is pricing in."