(Bloomberg) -- Federal Reserve Vice Chair for Supervision Michael Barr cautioned the US economy would take a hit as the central bank confronts high inflation.

“I think that it is the case that we are going to see significant softening in the economy,” he told the Senate Banking Committee during a hearing in Washington on Tuesday. “Inflation is far too high.”

Fed officials are raising interest-rates aggressively to confront the highest price pressures in 40 years and have forecast that unemployment will advance to 4.4% in 2023, according to their median projection. The US unemployment rate in October was 3.7%.

Barr declined to comment on more pessimistic predictions that the jobless rate will in fact go much higher, though he did agree that the labor market would suffer.

“I think we are going to see unemployment go up, but I don’t have a precise” estimate, he said during a lively exchange with Louisiana Republican Senator John Kennedy.

 

Jobless rate rises as UK prepares to tighten belts again

 
A branch of Jobcentre Plus, a government run employment support and benefits agency, in Hackney, London, Britain
People walk past a branch of Jobcentre Plus, a government run employment support and benefits agency, in Hackney, London, Britain, August 6, 2020. REUTERS/John Sibley
  • Jobless rate 3.6% vs Reuters poll 3.5%
  • Rate in September alone 3.8%
  • Employment falls by more than expected
  • Basic pay growth hits record excluding pandemic

LONDON, Nov 15 (Reuters) - Britain's unemployment rate unexpectedly rose and vacancies fell for a fifth report in a row as employers worried about the outlook for the economy, official data showed on Tuesday, ahead of a tough government budget plan later this week.