Economics

Fed’s Waller Nods to Economic ‘Collateral Damage’ as Rates Rise

  • Fed governor describes interest rates as a ‘brute-force tool’
  • Officials trying to minimize damage while cooling off prices

Christopher Waller

Photographer: Bess Adler/Bloomberg
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The Federal Reserve is doing all it can to avoid “collateral damage” from raising interest rates, a “brute-force tool” that can act as a “hammer” on the economy, Governor Christopher Waller said.

“When you have to use a brute-force tool, sometimes there’s some collateral damage that happens,” Waller said Monday at a Fed Listens event in Nashville that was also broadcast virtually. “We’re trying to do this in a way that there’s not much of it, but we can’t tailor policy.”