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5/12/2008 - SV1
The Fed raised interest rates a quarter point to 1.25 percent on June 30, beginning the first tightening exercise in four years following strong growth and higher prices and said it expected to be able to tighten policy at a measured rates were still "very low, very accommodative and very supportive of growth going forward" but said the pace and scale of future action was yet to be a defined path (for future rate hikes)? No, there isn't. There can't be, because, like you, we are reacting to new information on a daily expect a series of quarter-percentage-point rate increases at subsequent Fed meetings this year to lift its funds rate to 2 percent by year-end. "We do not want to get ahead of the curve, don't want to raise rates so quickly that we stanch the recovery," Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City President Thomas told an economic forum here hosted by the bank's Omaha we don't want to get behind the curve, because when inflation does get into the economy in a systematic fashion, we know the pain that can come with trying to bring it back out," said , who is a voting member of the Fed's policy committee core consumer price inflation to remain beneath 2 percent, helped by a recent abatement in world commodity demand, but warned that the inflation rise since the start of the year had been real and would be going to watch the inflation numbers, the job numbers, and how those play out have to influence the action (Fed Chairman) Alan Greenspan and other members take as we think about these there was no mistaking the strength of the recovery -- which he called better balanced than last year, thanks to greater spending by businesses and the rebound in jobs he expects 2004 to deliver gross domestic product growth of over 4 percent, with the GDP growth rate hitting at least 4.5 percent around year-end. Nor was this optimism shaken by a weak jobs market in June, when 112,000 jobs were created versus Wall Street forecasts for more than double that the economy has the wherewithal to grow and I think it would be a mistake to allow one month to you to lose confidence in this recovery, and I haven't."