Fed's Bowman says she is comfortable with policy stance

Reuters

Published Feb 11, 2019 01:57PM ET

Fed's Bowman says she is comfortable with policy stance

SAN DIEGO (Reuters) - In her first public remarks as a U.S. central banker, Federal Reserve Governor Michelle Bowman said she is on board with the Fed's recent pivot to a "patient" approach to monetary policy that leaves interest rates indefinitely at current levels.

"When I look at the jobs numbers and when I look at the inflation numbers, our economy's in a good place," Bowman told an American Bankers Association conference in San Diego. Wage growth is solid, she said, and inflation is close to the Fed's 2-percent target. That's good, she added, for American families and workers.

"I think our policy is in a good place," she said. "I'm comfortable with the current stance of our policy."

A former Kansas State banking regulator who was appointed to the U.S. central bank last year by President Donald Trump to fill a spot on the Board of Governors now reserved for a community banking expert, Bowman voted for a rate hike in December and for a pause to Fed rate hikes in January.

"One of the most important responsibilities of a Federal Reserve governor is to serve as a permanent voting member of the FOMC," she said, referring to the Federal Open Market Committee that sets rate policy. She has one of 10 current votes on the panel.