(Reuters) - The U.S. labor force is not increasing fast enough to help with the Fed's immediate battle with inflation, St. Louis Fed president James Bullard said Thursday, discounting the hope that a flood of new workers will improve the supply of goods and ease wage pressure.
"We are pulling people back into the labor force but that is a slow process and not something that is occurring at a high enough frequency to help us on the inflation dimension," Bullard said.
By Howard Schneider
April 7, 2022
April 7, 2022
More Articles
AI As An Investment Theme Operates Under A Unique Level of Scrutiny
Artificial intelligence as an investment theme continues to operate under a uniquely intense level of scrutiny.
Citi Wealth Introduces AI-Powered Client Assistant Built on Google's Technology Stack
The system was built using the Gemini Enterprise Agent Platform, incorporating Google DeepMind's real-time avatar technology alongside Gemini's live audio and video models to enable low-latency, natural conversation. The result is an always-on digital presence that Citi is positioning not as a replacement for advisors, but as an extension of the advisory relationship.