(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
Retail Investors Fueling Market Surge—$500B in Equity Inflows Expected, JPMorgan Says
Retail investors are poised to drive massive $500 billion wave of equity inflows in second half of 2025, according to a new forecast from JPMorgan.
Markets So Unfazed By Tariffs That It’s Making Trump Bolder
To Trump, rallying stock market is evidence that Wall Street likes tariffs. But investors say they’re just counting on the US president to back down.