Wednesday, December 31, 2025
ADVT 
International

US Central Bank Raises Interest Rates By 0.25 Points

IANS, 16 Dec, 2015 12:01 PM
    For the first time in nearly a decade, America's central bank, the US Federal Reserve raised its key interest rate on Wednesday from a range of 0 percent to 0.25 percent to a range of 0.25 percent to 0.5 percent.
     
    The move was widely expected. The rate hike though a small one, is seen as a sign of how much the US economy has healed since the 2007-2008 financial crisis.
     
    The central bank believes the US economy is strong now and no longer needs crutches.
     
    The announcement came at the conclusion of the crucial two-day meeting of the policy making federal open market committee's (FOMC).
     
    "The Committee judges that there has been considerable improvement in labour market conditions this year, and it is reasonably that confident inflation will rise," the Fed said in its statement.
     
    Stocks rallied with the Dow rising over 100 points after the announcement, CNN reported. Investors were pleased to see that the Fed expects "only gradual increases" in interest rates next year.
     
    The Fed put interest rates near zero during the financial crisis in December 2008 to help stimulate the economy and boost the collapsed housing market.
     
    But the economy is now a lot healthier with unemployment at 5 percent, half of the 10 percent rate it hit in 2009 during the worst of the jobs crisis.
     
     
    Over 12 million jobs have been added since the recession ended. Wages -- which have barely grown during the recovery -- have also started to pick up recently.
     
    On Wednesday, the Fed's committee improved its economic outlook. Compared to its last forecast in September, the Fed raised its expectations for economic growth next year to 2.4 percent from 2.3 percent.
     
    It also lowered its projection for unemployment in 2016 to 4.7 percent from 4.8 percent.
     
    The Fed still has low expectations for inflation -- a key measure when it decides to raise rates again.
     
    The Fed's target for inflation is 2 percent, but right now its close to zero. The Fed sees inflation inching up in the years to come, but not hitting 2 percent until 2018.
     
    Known as "liftoff," the Fed's action is expected to be the first of more rate increases that will probably come in 2016, CNN said.
     
    The last rate hike was in June 2006 culminating a steady series of rate hikes that began two years earlier.
     
    Janet Yellen, the first woman Fed Chair in the bank's 112-year history, would explain the bank's historic decision at a press conference at 2:30 p.m. 

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Northern B.C. Port Blames Abandoned Pipe For Fuel Leak Into Ocean

    Northern B.C. Port Blames Abandoned Pipe For Fuel Leak Into Ocean
    PRINCE RUPERT, B.C. — The Prince Rupert Port Authority says workers are trying to stop an abandoned pipe from slowly leaking fuel into the ocean in northwestern B.C.

    Northern B.C. Port Blames Abandoned Pipe For Fuel Leak Into Ocean

    113 Feared Dead In Indonesian Military Plane Crash

    113 Feared Dead In Indonesian Military Plane Crash
    All 113 people on board a Hercules C-130 military cargo aircraft were feared killed when the military plane crashed into a residential area in Medan city on Indonesia's Sumatra island on Tuesday, media reported.

    113 Feared Dead In Indonesian Military Plane Crash

    Indian Sentenced To 20 Months For Sex With Minor

    Indian Sentenced To 20 Months For Sex With Minor
    An Indian national in Singapore was on Tuesday sentenced to 20 months' imprisonment for having sex with a minor, a media report said.

    Indian Sentenced To 20 Months For Sex With Minor

    Russian MP Seeks Measures Against Canada For Sanctions

    Russian MP Seeks Measures Against Canada For Sanctions
    oscow should adopt measures against Canada in response to Ottawa’s latest move to expand sanctions against Russia, senior Russian lawmaker Alexei Pushkov said on Tuesday.

    Russian MP Seeks Measures Against Canada For Sanctions

    From Antennas To Swipe Screens, Cellphones Mark 30 Years In Canada

    From Antennas To Swipe Screens, Cellphones Mark 30 Years In Canada
    It was July 1985 and Surerus says he needed the phone to help run his business as a travelling funeral director out of Peterborough, Ont. The phone attached to an aerial in his car and came with its own carrying bag.

    From Antennas To Swipe Screens, Cellphones Mark 30 Years In Canada

    Stop Using Islamic State Name, British PM David Cameron Tells BBC

    Stop Using Islamic State Name, British PM David Cameron Tells BBC
    British Prime Minister David Cameron on Monday called on the BBC not to use the phrase "Islamic State" when referring to the terror group operating in Iraq and Syria.

    Stop Using Islamic State Name, British PM David Cameron Tells BBC