KEY POINTS
  • Fed Chairman Jerome Powell says the central bank is unlikely to move on interest rates given the "sustained" economic expansion.
  • The central bank has cut its benchmark rate three times this year to a range of 1.5%-1.75%.
  • "Looking ahead, my colleagues and I see a sustained expansion of economic activity, a strong labor market, and inflation near our symmetric 2 percent objective as most likely," he tells a joint congressional committee.

The Federal Reserve is unlikely to adjust interest rates anytime soon so long as the economy remains on its present path, central bank Chairman Jerome Powell told Congress on Wednesday.

In commentary he provided to the Joint Economic Committee, Powell reiterated a stance he outlined a few weeks ago that the Fed's moves this year toward more accommodative monetary policy have helped support an economy that continues to grow. He noted that Fed moves tend to have a lagged effect, meaning that it will take time to assess what impact they are having.