The Week In The US : Resolutions

 | Mar 24, 2013 07:37AM ET

The Fed was early with New Year resolutions, committing to QE3 in September and to low rates in December. As for now, it broke neither of promises, confirming all pledges at the March FOMC meeting.

Meanwhile, the Congress, in due time, passed a continuing resolution to keep the federal government running until the end of the current fiscal year, relieving some stress. The next dead line is now on May 19th, when the federal debt ceiling will be reinstated. The Congress now has a little less than two months to decide on a new ceiling, as it will be automatically hit at that time. When it suspended the ceiling in January, the Congress also decided that, when reinstated, it would equal the previous amount augmented by the Treasury's issuances over the period. The piece of law also set the obligation for both chambers of Congress to pass a budget for next fiscal year. Were they to fail, Congressmen would not get paid, the money being transferred on an escrow account instead.

As for now, budget committees of both chambers proposed budgets which look impossible to reconcile. The House's proposals are for a balanced budget ten years from now, thanks to dramatic cuts in spending, both discretionary and mandatory, the later thanks to a reform that would turn Medicare into a premium-support voucher and raise the age of eligibility from 65 to 67. The Senate draft plans for tax increases. Both pledges for the elimination of tax loopholes. In the next few weeks, the White House will add its own proposition to the debate.

The federal government will not shutdown this time, which is indeed a great relief, as these events are highly disruptive, but the fiscal outlook remains rather blurred, an additional reason for the Fed to be as clear as possible. At the March 19th and 20th meeting, the FOMC reiterated the same message as of lately. The third wave of quantitative easing will keep on being implemented at the exact same monthly pace of USD 40 bn of MBS and USD 45 bn of long-dated Treasuries. The Fed Fund Target remains in the 0-0.25% range, and will be kept there as long as the unemployment rate does not break the 6.5%-threshold (which is not a trigger as Chairman Bernanke reminded us), unless prospects are for inflation to accelerate above 2.5% within a 1 to 2 year horizon.

The Fed also released the update forecasts from FOMC members (voting and non-voting) for GDP growth, the unemployment rate, the pace of increase in the PCE deflator (headline and core) as well as the likely timing of policy firming and the likely level of the Fed Fund Target over the next two years. On balance, Fed members seem slightly less optimistic about GDP growth but slightly more confident about the pace of decrease in the unemployment rate. As for inflation, they largely forecast that the 2%-target will be missed this year, next year and the year after. Only one or two members expect PCE inflation to be higher than 2.5% in 2015 (at 2.6%), leaving large rooms of manoeuvre to the Fed. The focus will remain solely on the labour market.