Current:Home > ContactFed’s Powell gets an earful about inflation and interest rates from small businesses -TradeSphere
Fed’s Powell gets an earful about inflation and interest rates from small businesses
View
Date:2025-04-18 05:58:46
YORK, Pa. (AP) — Federal Reserve officials typically gather many of their insights and observations about the economy from some of the top Ph.D. economists in Washington.
On a visit Monday to York, Pennsylvania, Chair Jerome Powell got an earful from a group with a decidedly different perspective: Small-business people who are grappling personally with inflation, high interest rates, labor shortages and other challenges of the post-pandemic economy.
Powell, along with Patrick Harker, head of the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, traveled to York to learn about the efforts of the long-time manufacturing hub, where York Peppermint Patties were once made, to diversify its economy.
The businesspeople they spoke with were generally optimistic but expressed a range of concerns: They are still having trouble finding all the workers they need. Higher interest rates have discouraged some of them from expanding. And higher costs and a chronic difficulty in acquiring enough supplies have persisted.
“We were a little blind-sided by inflation,” said Julie Flinchbaugh Keene, co-owner of Flinchbaugh’s Orchard & Farm Market, who spoke to Powell and Harker at the Gather 256 coffee shop while the two Fed officials conducted a walking tour. Since the pandemic struck more than three years ago, she said, “predictability is just gone. It’s very hard to operate a business without predictability.”
Keene noted that her parents had experienced high inflation when they ran the business back in the 1980s. But the company was much smaller then and had no employees. As a result, her father said, “I don’t have any wisdom to give you.”
“We’ll get inflation down,” Powell said after listening to her concerns.
During his tour of downtown York, Powell also met Jennifer Heasley, owner of Sweet Mama’s Mambo Sauce, who makes a barbecue-style sauce and owns a food stall in the York Central Market.
When asked before his visit what she would most want to tell Powell, Heasley said, “Lower interest rates.”
Heasley said she is paying a much higher rate now on her credit cards, which she sometimes uses to fund her business.
Powell’s visit occurred as the Fed is monitoring the economy for signs that its streak of rate increases are having their desired effect and that inflation is continuing to cool. At their most recent meeting two weeks ago, Fed officials signaled confidence about a so-called “soft landing,” in which inflation would fall back to their 2% target without a deep recession. The policymakers predicted that inflation would fall to about 2.6% by the end of 2024, with only a small rise in the unemployment rate.
But given its confidence in the economy’s resilience, the Fed also signaled that it expects to keep its benchmark rate higher for longer, potentially raising it once more this year and keeping it above 5% well into 2024.
Inflation has dwindled from a four-decade high of 9.1% in June 2022 to 3.7% in August. In the meantime, the unemployment rate has defied predictions by remaining low while the economy has continued to expand.
Before the walking tour, Powell and Harker conducted a roundtable discussion with several business owners and executives, nonprofit leaders and educators.
Kevin Schreiber, CEO of the York County Economic Alliance, a business development group, told reporters that the local economy is growing at a healthy pace. At the same time, Schreiber said, many business people are worried about the next 12 to 18 months and the prospect that interest rates will stay high and inflation won’t be fully conquered.
A lack of child care is another top problem for many businesses in the area, Schreiber said, because it keeps many parents out of the workforce.
Schreiber said there were 219 child care centers in the area before the pandemic. Now, there are only 170. Many of the remaining centers are operating at less than full capacity because of staffing shortages.
Tom Palisin, executive director of The Manufacturer’s Association, who took part in the roundtable, said later that higher interest rates have led many local companies to pull back on acquisitions and investments in new technology.
“Companies want to invest,” he said, “but they’ve hit the pause button.”
veryGood! (49379)
Related
- Average rate on 30
- UNRWA says Israeli strike hit Gaza food aid center, killing 1 staffer and wounding 22 others
- Terrified residents of San Francisco’s Tenderloin district sue for streets free of drugs, tents
- A critical Rhode Island bridge will need to be demolished and replaced
- Chuck Scarborough signs off: Hoda Kotb, Al Roker tribute legendary New York anchor
- Zayn Malik Shares Rare Insight Into Life Away From Spotlight With His Daughter Khai
- 'A world apart': How racial segregation continues to determine opportunity for American kids
- Dua Lipa, Shania Twain, SZA, more to perform at sold out Glastonbury Festival 2024
- Elon Musk's skyrocketing net worth: He's the first person with over $400 billion
- Hilary Duff’s Husband Matthew Koma Is All of Us Watching Love is Blind
Ranking
- Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
- Kansas is close to banning gender-affirming care as former GOP holdouts come aboard
- Iowa Republican shelves bill to criminalize death of an “unborn person” because of IVF concerns
- Mega Millions jackpot closing in on $800 million: What to know about the next lottery drawing
- Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
- 'All in'? Why Dallas Cowboys' quiet free agency doesn't diminish Jerry Jones' bold claim
- 'Keep watching': Four-time Pro Bowl RB Derrick Henry pushes back on doubters after Ravens deal
- The United States has its first large offshore wind farm, with more to come
Recommendation
San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
Hilary Duff’s Husband Matthew Koma Is All of Us Watching Love is Blind
Number of Americans filing for jobless benefits remains low as labor market continues to thrive
Landslide damages multiple homes in posh LA neighborhood, 1 home collapses: See photos
California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
Small businesses are cutting jobs. It's a warning sign for the US economy.
Can women really have it all? Lily Allen says kids ruined career, highlighting that challenge
JPMorgan fined almost $350M for issues with trade surveillance program