(Bloomberg) -- Former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers said the Federal Reserve’s decision to cut interest rates last month was a mistake after new data showed that US job growth last month topped all estimates.
Most Read from Bloomberg
-
Singapore Ends 181 Years of Horse Racing to Make Way for Homes
-
For a Master of Brutalist Provocations, a Modest Museum Appraisal
-
Mexico City Restricts Airbnb Rentals to Curb ‘Gentrification’
-
NYC Schools Reverse Course on Cell-Phone Ban After Parents Balk
“With the benefit of hindsight, the 50 basis point cut in September was a mistake though not one of great consequence,” Summers, a paid contributor to Bloomberg TV, said in a post on X.
Nonfarm payrolls increased 254,000 in September, the most in six months. The unemployment rate fell to 4.1% and hourly earnings increased 4% from a year earlier, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics’ figures released Friday.
“Today’s employment report confirms suspicions that we are in a high neutral rate environment where responsible monetary policy requires caution in rate cutting,” Summers added.
During the Fed’s September meeting, policymakers said they were confident that inflation is under control and shifted their concern to the labor market. The latest jobs data is helping ease some of those worries and has investors betting on a smaller, quarter-point cut at the Fed’s November meeting.
Most Read from Bloomberg Businessweek
-
Rotting Rice in India Fuels Discontent About Modi’s Food Policy
-
How a Short Seller’s Attack Threatens This Spanish Family Company
-
Elon Musk’s Role in Reanimating the Far-Right Term ‘Remigration’
?2024 Bloomberg L.P.