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    Poland blocks EU compromise on global minimum corporate tax deal

    The Polish revenue chief said that despite amendments, Warsaw still had concerns that the minimum tax could enter into force without the new rules preventing big multinationals from booking profits in the most favourable countries.Nearly 140 countries, including Poland, reached a two-track deal in October on a minimum tax rate of 15% on multinationals and agreed to make it harder for companies such as Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL)’s Google, Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) and Meta’s Facebook (NASDAQ:FB) to avoid tax by booking profits in low-tax jurisdictions.France, which holds the EU’s rotating six-month presidency, has pushed for a quick implementation of the deal in the 27-nation bloc, where tax issues require unanimous approval.Poland was one of four countries to block an attempt last month to find a compromise, but Sweden, Estonia and Malta dropped their opposition after tweaks to the deal.”It (the proposed compromise) is not a legally binding solution for assuring that both pillar I and pillar II enter into force in a similar point in time,” Polish revenue chief Magdalena Rzeczkowska told a meeting in Brussels.French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire said that he was “absolutely not convinced” by Poland’s position, that Warsaw’s concerns had been taken into account and other member states had also made concessions.Le Maire said that he would put the issue back on the agenda of the EU finance ministers’ next monthly meeting. More

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    Russian banks need to be recapitalised as losses loom, VTB CEO says

    “I don’t know yet where the capital boost will come from but it will come for sure. Not only for VTB but for the wider banking sector, I think,” Kostin said on Tuesday, as he expected the financial sector to post losses this year. Western sanctions on Russia following its invasion of Ukraine in February have cut Moscow off from the global financial system and from nearly half of its $640 billion in gold and foreign exchange reserves. Some of Russia’s biggest banks, VTB included, were cut off from the SWIFT global banking messaging system, and international payment cards Visa (NYSE:V) and MasterCard stopped servicing Russian accounts abroad, adding pressure on banks.Since major private banking bailouts in 2017 worth over 2 trillion roubles, the central bank has opted for removing banking licences over providing cash injections. Previously, VTB was allowed to pay smaller dividends on preferred shares held by the state to boost the bank’s capital, in a non-cash form of the support. Russia’s banks may need as much as 2.2 trillion roubles in state support, according to the Center for Macroeconomic Analysis and Short-term Forecasting, of which the bulk, or 1.5 trillion, would be needed for top lenders, private included. The central bank did not immediately reply to a Reuters request for comment on Tuesday. More

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    Japan MOF panel recommends revoking Russia's most-favoured-nation status

    TOKYO (Reuters) – An advisory panel to Japan’s finance minister on Tuesday recommended that the law should be changed to revoke Russia’s most-favoured-nation trading status following Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.The recommendation was made weeks after Prime Minister Fumio Kishida pledged to deprive Moscow of the status as Japan kept in line with the Group of Seven (G7) advanced nations over sanctions against Russia.”Following G7 leaders’ statement and from the standpoint of coordinating with international community in further adopting sanctions as needed against Russia, we will revoke Russia’s most-favoured nation treatment on tariffs,” the panel said.The panel called for revoking Russia’s adoption of preferential WTO treaty tariffs by revising the law and ordinances.The law revision would raise tariffs on Japan’s imports from Russia by 10%, or 150 billion yen. Currently, Japan’s imports from Russia stand at an annual 1.5 trillion yen.In 2021, Russia accounted for 81% of Japan’s sea urchin imports and 47.6% of crab imports, government data showed.As preferential World Trade Organisation treaty tariffs are removed when Russia’s most-favoured-nation status is revoked, tariffs would rise to 5% from WTO rates of 3.5% on some fishery products such as salmon roe, salmon and trout. Crabs would face a tariff rise to 6% from 4%. Tariffs on shaven wood such as pine trees would rise to 8% from the WTO preferential rate of 4.8%, the panel said, adding the measures would take effect a day after promulgation through fiscal year-end of March 2023.Russia calls the Feb. 24 invasion in Ukraine a “special operation” to disarm its neighbour. The West says it launched an unprovoked invasion.Following the invasion, the Japanese government slapped asset-freeze sanctions on more than 100 Russian officials, oligarchs, banks and other institutions, in step with G7 economies. Japan has also banned high-tech exports to Russia. More

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    81% of U.S. adults are worried about a recession hitting this year, survey finds

    Rate hikes, soaring energy prices and geopolitical risks have combined to stoke fears of a possible recession. Credit Suisse however, thinks that is an unlikely scenario.
    Michael Nagle | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    After two years of the coronavirus pandemic, a recession and a rapid recovery, Americans are worried that the economy may swiftly decline once again.
    Some 81% of adults said they think the U.S. economy is likely to experience a recession in 2022, according to the CNBC + Acorns Invest in You survey, conducted by Momentive. The online survey of nearly 4,000 adults was conducted from March 23 to 24.  

    Certain groups are anticipating a potential economic downturn more than others, the survey found. That includes Republicans, who are more likely to think there will be a recession than Democrats, as well as those who see themselves as financially worse off this year than they were last year.

    Arrows pointing outwards

    What a recession means
    The National Bureau of Economic Research, the arbiter of calling recessions, defines one as “significant decline in economic activity that is spread across the economy and lasts more than a few months.”
    The last recorded recession took place in 2020, when the coronavirus pandemic spurred mass shutdowns and layoffs across the U.S.
    Since, however, the U.S. economy has seen a stunning recovery. The labor market has added back millions of jobs and is nearing its pre-pandemic state. In addition, wages have gone up for many workers, including those in lower-paying jobs.
    More from Invest in You:Joint vs. separate accounts: What couples need to think aboutWant to find financial success? Here’s how to get startedBefore buying a house, here’s how to set yourself up for success

    Because of this, many economists aren’t too concerned that a recession is on the horizon.  
    “If you look at the labor market data right now, you’d be hard pressed to find any indication of recession,” said Nick Bunker, economic research director for North America at the Indeed Hiring Lab. “Maybe a relative slowdown, but that’s from really hot to just hot.”
    Risks on the horizon
    Even though the labor recovery is still going strong, there are other forces impacting consumers.
    Inflation, for example, has hit many Americans hard and could hinder the economic recovery. In February, the consumer price index surged 7.9% on the year, the highest since January 1982. Prices have gone up in many categories such as housing, food and energy.
    “Inflation is the boogeyman when it comes to recoveries,” said Robert Frick, corporate economist at the Navy Federal Credit Union.
    That’s because if prices continue to climb — as they’re projected to — people may begin to pull back on spending, which could lead businesses to halt hiring. The Federal Reserve is also poised to continue to raise interest rates, which will slow down the economy to curb inflation.

    This is a blunt tool, however, according to Bunker. The central bank must be careful to cool the economy enough to bring prices back down without tipping the U.S. into another recession.
    There’s also geopolitical uncertainty around the war in Ukraine, which has contributed to rising fuel prices and will likely continue to pressure the global economy. In addition, the yield curve between the 2-year and 10-year U.S. Treasury bonds recently inverted for the first time since 2019, a signal that has preceded recessions in the past.
    Still, this isn’t a sure sign that a recession is on the horizon, said Frick.
    “Of all the things you have to worry about, I don’t think that the yield curve inverting is one of them,” he said.
    What to do now
    While it may be too early for Americans to prepare for a recession, they could take steps now to better their financial situation regardless.
    That includes boosting emergency and retirement savings, as well as trimming budgets to keep spending down amid inflation that’s likely to continue.
    “It pays to take a step back and look at the positives and weigh the negatives against historical evidence,” Frick said. “If you do that with the odds of recession, they’re still relatively low, but risks are high, and uncertainty is high.”
    TUNE IN: Watch Sharon Epperson all day on CNBC discussing recession fears, consumer spending and financial literacy in schools.
    SIGN UP: Money 101 is an 8-week learning course to financial freedom, delivered weekly to your inbox. For the Spanish version Dinero 101, click here.
    Disclosure: NBCUniversal and Comcast Ventures are investors in Acorns. More

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    Here’s what consumers plan to cut back on if prices continue to surge

    Edwin Lopez sorts the money in the cash register at Frankie’s Pizza on January 12, 2022 in Miami, Florida.
    Joe Raedle | Getty Images

    As inflation continues to weigh on American households, people are plotting what they’ll cut from their budgets in the coming months to keep spending in check.

    More than 50% of adults say they’ve already cut back on dining out and will consider reducing that further if inflation continues to surge, according to the CNBC + Acorns Invest in You survey, conducted by Momentive. The online survey of nearly 4,000 adults was conducted March 23-24.  

    Arrows pointing outwards

    People are also cutting back on driving and subscriptions and are even canceling vacations to keep up with inflation, the survey found.
    “It’s been astounding,” said Tania Brown, an Atlanta-based certified financial planner and founder of FinanciallyConfidentMom.com.

    Arrows pointing outwards

    People are thinking about rising prices all the time
    Inflation is at its highest level in 40 years and has pushed up the prices of most consumer goods and services, including housing, food and energy.
    That means many Americans are suddenly spending more on essentials, making their budgets tighter without any change in habits. People are noticing these hikes and paying closer attention. Nearly half of all adults said they think about rising prices all the time, while 55% of those with annual household income of $50,000 or less are constantly checking costs, the survey found.

    “Having your eyes focused on your spending is always a good strategy,” said Susan Greenhalgh, an accredited financial counselor who runs Mind Your Money LLC in Rhode Island. “You really can’t understand what’s happening with your money unless you’re really looking at it and measuring it.”
    More from Invest in You:When to up your home-buying budget or stick to your original priceWhy you should start paying off debt now — and how to get startedInflation is costing U.S. households nearly $300 more a month
    Keeping track of what you spend can also help you tailor where you can cut back, she said, as inflation hits everyone differently. If you’re someone who doesn’t eat out much but is getting pummeled by gas prices at the pump, reducing driving will probably help your budget more than skipping a few dinners at a restaurant.
    It’s also important to be watching and comparing your spending month to month because prices are rising so quickly. You may have to adjust more frequently than you’ve had to in the past.
    “The No. 1 goal is, no matter what, to protect the necessities, and that is food, shelter, basic transportation and basic medical,” said Brown.
    What to do about inflation
    Inflation is poised to continue to run hot, squeezing budgets even further. More than 75% of adults said they’re worried higher prices will force them to rethink their financial choices, the survey found.
    The impact will be the harshest on those with the lowest incomes who may be pushed into survival mode, said Brown. For those struggling to cut spending even more, she also said to reach out to creditors and lenders to see if you can put off payments.
    Some people may also qualify for programs to help with utility bills, which could help with monthly costs she said. It may also be time to dip into emergency savings to cover your essential costs, if you need to, she added.
    Those with higher incomes will also have to adjust, especially if they want to keep saving at the same rate as they were before inflation ticked up, said Greenhalgh.
    Of course, if your budget is stretched too thin, cutting back on savings may have to happen to avoid debt. If that’s the case, both Brown and Greenhalgh suggest putting away smaller amounts consistently to keep yourself in the habit of saving.
    “As long as you’re taking things in the right direction, that’s great,” said Brown.
    TUNE IN: Watch Sharon Epperson all day on CNBC discussing recession fears, consumer spending and financial literacy in schools.
    SIGN UP: Money 101 is an 8-week learning course to financial freedom, delivered weekly to your inbox. For the Spanish version Dinero 101, click here.
    Disclosure: NBCUniversal and Comcast Ventures are investors in Acorns. More

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    FirstFT: US blocks Russian dollar debt payments

    The US Treasury said it would halt Russia’s ability to make debt payments in dollars through US banks as world leaders sought to punish Moscow for the apparent mass killings of unarmed civilians in Ukraine.Emmanuel Macron urged a ban on Russian oil and coal imports while Joe Biden called for a war crimes trial following evidence Russian soldiers had committed atrocities in the town of Bucha, north of Kyiv.“There are very clear indications of war crimes,” Macron said in an interview on France Inter radio on Monday.Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelensky toured Bucha and other suburbs of Kyiv with foreign journalists yesterday as international investigators began to gather evidence of the killings.The decision by the US Treasury to not permit dollar debt payments to be made from Russian government accounts at US financial institutions will bring Moscow a step closer to a possible default on its obligations to international investors.“Russia must choose between draining remaining valuable dollar reserves or new revenue coming in, or default,” a US Treasury official said.More on Ukraine: Energy: Berlin has seized Gazprom Germania, the subsidiary of the Russian group operating some of Germany’s largest natural gas storage facilities.Oligarch under fire: Alexei Mordashov made his fortune in steel and has interests in coal, gold, travel and media. But after being targeted by EU and UK sanctions, one of Russia’s richest men is fighting to keep his most prized assets.Superyachts: Spanish authorities seized a $90mn yacht belonging to Russian oligarch Viktor Vekselberg following a US request. A vessel said to be owned by Roman Abramovich left a Turkish marina after a Financial Times report that the port’s UK-listed operator risked violating sanctions.Opinion: Viktor Orban’s election victory in Hungary will be greeted with delight in Moscow, Beijing and Mar-a-Lago — and with dismay in Brussels and Kyiv, writes Gideon Rachman. Vladimir Putin’s catastrophic failure in Ukraine is embarrassing to Xi Jinping, says Jonathan Haslam, emeritus professor in the history of international relations at the University of Cambridge.Are you from Ukraine? Do you have friends and family in, or from, Ukraine whose lives have been upended? Or perhaps you’re doing something to help those individuals, such as fundraising or housing people in your own homes. We want to hear from you. Tell us via a short survey.Thanks for reading FirstFT Americas. Here’s the rest of today’s news — GordonFive more stories in the news1. Musk becomes Twitter’s biggest shareholder Twitter shares closed up nearly 30 per cent yesterday after Tesla chief executive Elon Musk disclosed a stake in the social media network worth $2.9bn. The purchase, equivalent to 9.2 per cent of the company’s shares, comes a week after Musk said he was giving the idea of buying a social media company “serious thought”. Alphaville has a explainer, naturally, in tweets.2. Pandemic windfall The chief executives of Pfizer, BioNTech and Moderna enjoyed a combined pay package of more than $100mn during the pandemic, reflecting the huge success of the vaccines developed by their companies. Albert Bourla of Pfizer, Ugur Sahin of BioNTech and Stéphane Bancel of Moderna also saw their paper wealth grow thanks to share price increases driven by investor enthusiasm.3. Schultz halts Starbucks buybacks Howard Schultz pledged to suspend Starbucks’ share buyback programme as he began his third term as the US coffee chain’s chief executive. The decision came as Starbucks faces a growing unionisation movement in its home market, rising wage and commodity costs, and potential threats to international growth.4. UN report on global warming delayed by top polluters Tense negotiations involving the US and China delayed a landmark UN report that concluded that the narrow window to limit global warming would require the phasing out of fossil fuels, an electrified energy system, carbon storage and lower methane emissions.5. Silicon Valley’s Sequoia Capital names new leader One of Silicon Valley’s oldest and most successful venture capital firms, Sequoia Capital, is changing its leadership. Roelof Botha, a partner at Sequoia who leads its US and European operations, will assume the firm’s leadership in July taking over from billionaire investor Doug Leone, who will retire aged 65.The day aheadUkraine crisis Volodymyr Zelensky will address the UN Security Council after accusing Russian forces of committing war crimes in towns surrounding Kyiv before retreating to concentrate on their campaign in the south and east of the country. Moscow said it would present “empirical evidence” to the meeting proving its forces were not involved.ISM Services: The Institute for Supply Management’s non-manufacturing index is expected to jump to 58.4 in March from 56.5 in February, according to economists polled by Refinitiv. The ISM Services index fell for a third consecutive month in February as the Omicron-led wave of coronavirus slowed down growth. Trade: The US trade deficit is forecast to narrow to $88.5bn in February from $89.7bn in January, according to economists polled by Refinitiv. Separately, data from Statistics Canada are expected to show Canada’s trade surplus increased to C$2.9bn in February from C$2.62bn in January, according to a Refinitiv survey.Federal Reserve speakers Fed Governor Lael Brainard will speak at a Minneapolis Fed conference to discuss how inflation affects workers and families. New York Fed president John Williams will participate in a discussion hosted by The New York Times on “Health and the Economy.”What else we’re readingWill Amazon workers’ victory trigger broader change? The number of US employees in a union has halved in the past four decades. But the victory for workers in the Staten Island Amazon warehouse, who last week won the right to form a union, suggests that trend could be changing, argues Sarah O’Connor.

    Union leader Chris Smalls, a former employee at the Amazon site, celebrates the unionisation with workers © Andrea Renault/AFP/Getty Images

    Blockchain-powered broker Sam Bankman-Fried looks more like a student who has just rolled out of bed than the boss of an international cryptocurrency exchange valued at $32bn. But the 30-year-old chief executive of FTX has a futuristic vision for finance based on new protocols being built on blockchains, the distributed ledger technology underpinning cryptocurrencies.A taipan’s memories For those interested in the inner workings of Hong Kong Inc, as well as a melancholy reminder of how much both the territory and China-US commercial relations have changed for the worse in recent years, the autobiography of former Jardine Matheson and Hutchison Whampoa executive Simon Murray makes fascinating reading.Why are a leader’s first 100 days so important? Is an action-filled first 100 days a good idea? Not necessarily, say leaders who have been through them. Much depends on the state of the organisation you are taking on. Discover what’s shaking up the world of work with our latest newsletter, Working It, from work & careers editor Isabel Berwick. Sign up here to receive the first edition this week.The fastest growing companies in the Americas The third annual ranking of the region’s businesses this year — perhaps unsurprisingly — places a US medtech business in the top spot. The full report and analysis will be published on April 28.Audio BooksFrom comic, compelling reflections on ADHD and autism to pure escapism in Paris, Alex Clark rounds up the best new audio books — including an epic celebration of Terry Pratchett. More

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    Money Clinic podcast: Should I save for a property or a pension?

    Pension — or property? As the cost of living increases, it’s getting harder for younger workers to achieve one of these financial goals — let alone both.In this week’s episode of the Money Clinic podcast, presenter Claer Barrett meets 28-year-old Ashley, who works in the tech industry and dreams of owning his own home.Currently renting with friends in east London, he is well aware that the average first-time buyer deposit is now more than £57,000 and over double that in the capital. The time needed to save a deposit leaves his cash at the mercy of rising inflation — yet the investments he has made into a stocks and shares Isa have had a very mixed performance. And how does he square saving for retirement with all of this?

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    Podcast guests Paul Johnson, director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies and Jason Butler, the financial expert and FT columnist, have lots to say about the financial challenges facing younger investors, and tips about devising a long-term financial strategy. To listen, search for Money Clinic wherever you get your podcasts, or click on the embedded link above. If you would like to be a future guest on Money Clinic podcast, please email the team via [email protected] or follow Claer on social media @Claerb. More

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    The US Economy Is Booming. Why Are Economists Worrying About a Recession?

    There is little sign that a recession is imminent. But sky-high demand and supply shortages are testing the economy’s limits.Employers are adding hundreds of thousands of jobs a month, and would hire even more people if they could find them. Consumers are spending, businesses are investing, and wages are rising at their fastest pace in decades.So naturally, economists are warning of a possible recession.Rapid inflation, soaring oil prices and global instability have led forecasters to sharply lower their estimates of economic growth this year, and to raise their probabilities of an outright contraction. Investors share that concern: The bond market last week flashed a warning signal that has often — though not always — foreshadowed a downturn.Such predictions may seem confusing when the economy, by many measures, is booming. The United States has regained more than 90 percent of the jobs lost in the early weeks of the pandemic, and employers are continuing to hire at a breakneck pace, adding 431,000 jobs in March alone. The unemployment rate has fallen to 3.6 percent, barely above the prepandemic level, which was itself a half-century low.But to the doomsayers, the recovery’s remarkable strength carries the seeds of its own destruction. Demand — for cars, for homes, for restaurant meals and for the workers to provide them — has outstripped supply, leading to the fastest inflation in 40 years. Policymakers at the Federal Reserve argue they can cool off the economy and bring down inflation without driving up unemployment and causing a recession. But many economists are skeptical that the Fed can engineer such a “soft landing,” especially in a moment of such extreme global uncertainty.“It’s like trying to land during an earthquake,” said Tara Sinclair, a professor of economics at George Washington University.William Dudley, a former president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, called a recession “virtually inevitable.” He is among the economists arguing that if the Fed had begun raising interest rates last year, it might have been able to rein in inflation merely by tapping the brakes on the economy. Now, they say, the economy is growing so rapidly — and prices are rising so quickly — that the only way for the Fed to get control is to slam on the brakes and cause a recession.Still, a majority of forecasters say a recession remains unlikely in the next year. High oil prices, rising interest rates and waning government aid will all drag down growth this year, said Aneta Markowska, chief economist for Jefferies, an investment bank. But corporate profits are strong, households have trillions in savings, and debt loads are low — all of which should provide a cushion against any slowdown.“It’s easy to construct a very negative narrative, but when you actually look at the magnitude of all those impacts, I don’t think they’re significant enough to push us into a recession in the next 12 months,” she said. Recessions, almost by definition, involve job losses and unemployment; right now, companies are doing practically anything they can to retain workers.“I just don’t see what would cause businesses to do a complete 180 and go from ‘We need to hire all these people and we can’t find them’ to ‘We have to lay people off,’” Ms. Markowska said. Economists, however, are notoriously terrible at predicting recessions. So it makes sense to focus instead on where the recovery is right now, and on the forces that are threatening to knock it off course.The State of Jobs in the United StatesJob openings and the number of workers voluntarily leaving their positions in the United States remained near record levels in March.March Jobs Report: U.S. employers added 431,000 jobs and the unemployment rate fell to 3.6 percent ​​in the third month of 2022.A Strong Job Market: Data from the Labor Department showed that job openings remained near record levels in February.Wages and Inflation: Economists hoped that as households shifted spending back to services, price gains would cool. Rapid wage growth could make that story more complicated.New Career Paths: For some, the Covid-19 crisis presented an opportunity to change course. Here is how these six people pivoted professionally.Return to the Office: Many companies are loosening Covid safety rules, leaving people to navigate social distancing on their own. Some workers are concerned.Unionization Efforts: The pandemic has fueled enthusiasm for organized labor. But the pushback has been brutal, especially in the private sector.Growth will slow. That’s not necessarily a bad thing.Last year was the best year for economic growth since the mid-1980s, and the best for job growth on record. Those kinds of explosive gains — enabled by vaccines and fueled by trillions of dollars in government aid — were not likely to be repeated this year.In fact, some slowdown is probably desirable. The rapid rebound in consumer spending, especially on cars, furniture and other goods, has overwhelmed supply chains, driving up prices. Demand for workers is so strong that jobs are going unfilled despite rising wages. Jerome H. Powell, the Fed chair, said recently that the labor market had gotten “tight to an unhealthy level.”Some economists, particularly on the left, took issue with that claim, arguing that the hot labor market was good for workers. But even most of them said the recent pace of job growth was unsustainable for long.“We have torn back toward normal at a really fast pace, and it would be unrealistic to think that could continue,” said Josh Bivens, the director of research at the Economic Policy Institute, a progressive think tank. Even slower wage growth, he said, wouldn’t worry him, as long as pay increases didn’t fall further behind inflation.But some economists cautioned against rooting for a slowdown in a rare moment when low-wage workers were seeing substantial pay increases, and unemployment was falling for vulnerable groups. The unemployment rate among Black Americans fell to 6.2 percent in March, but was still nearly double that of white Americans.“The recovery from my perspective is fairly robust, and so why not enjoy this right now?” said Michelle Holder, president of the Washington Center for Equitable Growth, a progressive think tank. She said that while economists were right to be concerned about high inflation, “I don’t think similar voices were this bent out of shape about high unemployment.”A slowdown doesn’t have to mean a recession. (In theory.)Rush-hour commuters are returning to New York City’s subways. The United States has regained more than 90 percent of the jobs lost in the early weeks of the pandemic.Gabby Jones for The New York TimesThe key question for policymakers is whether they can cool the economy without putting it into deep freeze. Mr. Powell argues that they can, though he acknowledges that it won’t be easy.His argument goes something like this: There are 11 million open jobs and fewer than six million unemployed workers. There are more would-be home buyers than there are homes to buy, and more would-be car buyers than available cars. By gradually raising interest rates and making it more expensive to borrow, the Fed is hoping to curb demand for workers and homes and cars, but not by so much that employers start cutting jobs.That is a tricky balance, and historically the Fed has failed to achieve it more often than not. But unlike after the last recession, when the grindingly slow recovery seemed at constant risk of stalling out, the current rebound is fast enough that it could lose substantial momentum without going into reverse. Employers could slash hiring plans, for example, and still have jobs for practically anyone who wanted one.Some economists also remain hopeful that supply constraints will ease as the pandemic recedes, which would allow inflation to cool without the Fed’s needing to do as much to reduce demand. There are some signs of that happening: More than 400,000 people rejoined the labor force in March, as falling coronavirus cases and more reliable school schedules allowed more people to return to work.Aaron Sojourner, an economist at the University of Minnesota, said policymakers shouldn’t think of the economy as “overheating” so much as “fevered,” its capacity limited by the pandemic.“When you have a fever, you can’t perform at the level that you can perform at when you’re healthy, and you break a sweat even when you’re doing less than what you used to be able to do,” he said. Improvements in the public health crisis, he said, should allow the fever to break.A lot could go wrong.For much of last year, Fed officials shared Mr. Sojourner’s view, seeing inflation as a result of pandemic-related disruptions that would soon dissipate. When those disruptions proved more persistent than expected, policymakers changed course, but too late to prevent inflation from accelerating beyond what they intended to allow.The challenge is that central bankers must make decisions before all the data is available.It is possible, for example, that the imbalances that led to rapid inflation are beginning to dissipate, largely on their own. Federal aid programs created early in the pandemic have mostly ended, and many families have drawn down their savings. That could bring down demand just as supply is starting to catch up. In that scenario, the Fed could short-circuit the recovery if it acts too aggressively.But it is also possible that strong job growth and rising wages will keep consumer demand high, while supply-chain disruptions and labor shortages linger. In that case, if the Fed is too cautious, it runs the risk of letting inflation spiral further out of control. The last time that happened, the Fed under Paul A. Volcker had to induce a crippling recession in the early 1980s to bring inflation to heel.Mr. Powell has argued it is not too late to prevent such a “hard landing.” But even if a recession is inevitable, it isn’t likely to happen overnight.“I don’t think we’re going to go into a recession in the next 12 months,” said Megan Greene, a senior fellow at Harvard’s Kennedy School and global chief economist for the Kroll Institute. “I think it’s possible in the 12 months after that.”Global turmoil makes everything more complicated. Soaring oil prices and global instability have led forecasters to lower their estimates of economic growth this year.Gabby Jones for The New York TimesWhen this year began, forecasters pegged February or March as the moment when major inflation indexes would hit their peak and begin to fall. But the war in Ukraine, and the resulting spike in oil prices, dashed those hopes. The year-over-year rate of inflation hit a 40-year high in February, and almost certainly accelerated further in March as gas prices topped $4 a gallon in much of the country.The pandemic itself also remains a wild card. China in recent weeks has imposed strict lockdowns in parts of the country in an effort to stop the spread of coronavirus cases there, and a new subvariant has led to a rise in cases in Europe. That could prolong supply-chain disruptions globally, even if the United States itself avoided another coronavirus wave.“The biggest unknown is global supply chains and how we manage all of those because it’s contingent on Chinese Covid policy and a war in Europe,” Ms. Greene said.There is little sign so far that rising gas prices, stock market volatility or fear of Covid has damped consumers’ willingness to spend, or businesses’ willingness to hire. But those factors are adding to uncertainty, making it harder for policymakers to discern where the economy is headed, and to decide how to react. More