Odd Lots

How Richmond Fed President Tom Barkin Sees the Economy Right Now

Is there still upside risk to inflation?

Thomas Barkin, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, left, during a Virginia Bankers Association and the Virginia Chamber of Commerce event in Richmond, Virginia, US, on Thursday, Jan. 11, 2024. Barkin last week said the central bank can lower interest rates as the economy normalizes and confidence grows about the downward path of inflation.Photographer: Jay Paul/Bloomberg
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This year’s Economic Symposium in Jackson Hole, Wyoming marked a big change for US monetary policy, with Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell telegraphing the first rate cuts in potentially two years. But what’s it actually like to be a policymaker at one of the most famous economics conferences in the world? And what do central bankers do when they all get together to talk policy? In this episode, we catch up with Richmond Fed President Tom Barkin, who describes what it’s like to be at Jackson Hole, what’s discussed and how the annual agenda put together by the Kansas City Fed comes together. We also talk about Powell’s speech and how Barkin is viewing the labor market right now. The transcript has been lightly edited for clarity.