KEY POINTS
  • Policymakers "will need to consider negative interest rates" in getting the U.S. economy back to health, St. Louis Fed economist Yi Wen said in a paper.
  • Most Fed officials have doubted they would go negative like Japan and parts of Europe.
  • The analysis is not binding in any way on the Fed, and Chairman Jerome Powell recently said he doesn't see below-zero policy rates as "an appropriate tool."
A runner passes the Marriner S. Eccles Federal Reserve Board building in Washington.

Getting the U.S. economy back to strong growth could require negative interest rates, according to a St. Louis Federal Reserve economist.

As many economists dismiss the likelihood of the current record-breaking slump being followed by an equally aggressive recovery, central bank economist Yi Wen said in a paper on the St. Louis Fed's website that achieving that kind of a rebound is necessary and possible.