The Federal Reserve building is seen on March 19, 2021 in Washington, DC. (DANIEL SLIM / AFP)

The Federal Reserve probably will need to begin raising interest rates in late 2022 or early 2023 as increased government spending keeps inflation above its long-run average target, according to the International Monetary Fund.

The US central bank likely will begin to scale back asset purchases in the first half of 2022, staff from the Washington-based fund said in a statement Thursday following the conclusion of so-called article IV consultations, the IMF’s assessment of countries’ economic and financial developments following meetings with lawmakers and public officials.

The Fed held interest rates near zero at its June 15-16 meeting and signaled it would probably keep them there through next year to help the US economy recover from COVID-19. Officials penciled in two rate hikes for 2023 and seven of the 18 policy makers want to raise rates in 2022, up from four in March

“Managing this transition – from providing reassurance that monetary policy will continue to deliver powerful support to the economy to preparing for an eventual scaling back of asset purchases and a withdrawal of monetary accommodation – will require deft communications under a potentially tight timeline,” IMF staff said in the concluding statement.

The Fed held interest rates near zero at its June 15-16 meeting and signaled it would probably keep them there through next year to help the US economy recover from COVID-19. Officials penciled in two rate hikes for 2023 and seven of the 18 policy makers want to raise rates in 2022, up from four in March.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell has said that recent steep increases in inflation will prove to be largely transitory due to bottlenecks and that expectations on the whole are where the Fed wants them.

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Inflation forecasts

The personal consumption expenditures price gauge that the Fed uses for its inflation target rose 3.9 percent in May from a year earlier, the most since 2008. The IMF forecasts the increase to be transitory, with the index peaking at 4.3 percent and dropping to around 2.5 percent by the end of 2022. That’s still above the Fed’s long-run average target of 2 percent.

The personal consumption expenditures price gauge that the Fed uses for its inflation target rose 3.9 percent in May from a year earlier, the most since 2008. The IMF forecasts the increase to be transitory, with the index peaking at 4.3 percent and dropping to around 2.5 percent by the end of 2022. That’s still above the Fed’s long-run average target of 2 percent

At its June meeting, the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) marked up all its inflation forecasts through the end of 2023, with officials seeing personal consumption expenditures – their preferred measure of price pressures – rising 3.4 percent in 2021 compared with a March projection of 2.4 percent. They increased the 2022 forecast to 2.1 percent, and 2.2 percent for the following year.

Fund staff estimates that the higher US spending proposed by President Joe Biden in the infrastructure-focused American Jobs Plan and the social-spending-based American Families Plan – which have yet to pass – would increase growth in gross domestic product by a cumulative value of about 5.25 percent from 2022 to 2024.

The IMF raised its estimate for US economic expansion this year to 7 percent – the fastest pace since 1984 – from a 6.4 percent forecast in April.

Lawmakers have release a wave of pandemic-relief funds over the past 15 months to buoy the economy with the US$1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan passed in March, a US$900 billion package approved in December and the US$2 trillion Cares Act of March 2020.

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“The unprecedented fiscal and monetary support, combined with the receding COVID-19 case numbers, should provide a substantial boost to activity in the coming months,” the IMF said. “Savings will be drawn down, demand will return for in-person services, and depleted inventories will be rebuilt.”