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Various Federal Reserve policy-makers said they would be open to speeding up the elimination of their bond-buying program if high inflation held and move more quickly to raise interest rates, minutes of the U.S. central bank’s last policy meeting showed.

“Various participants noted that the Committee should be prepared to adjust the pace of asset purchases and raise the target range for the federal funds rate sooner than participants currently anticipated if inflation continued to run higher than levels consistent with the Committee’s objectives,” the Fed said in the minutes from the Nov. 2-3 policy meeting released on Wednesday.

Fed policy-makers unanimously decided at that meeting to begin reducing the central bank’s $120-billion in monthly purchases of Treasuries and mortgage-backed securities, a program introduced in early 2020 to help nurse the economy through the COVID-19 pandemic.

The original pace would see the asset purchases tapered completely by next June. There have, however, been growing calls by some policy-makers to accelerate that timeline in the face of continued high inflation readings and stronger job gains since the meeting, in order to give the Fed greater flexibility to raise its benchmark overnight interest rate from the current near-zero level earlier next year if needed.

All signs point to a speeding up of the bond-buying taper now being firmly on the table at the Fed’s next meeting on Dec. 14-15. Economic data released on Wednesday showed the number of Americans filing new claims for unemployment benefits fell to the lowest level since 1969 last week, while the Fed’s preferred measure of inflation continued to run at more than twice the central bank’s 2 per cent flexible average goal in October.

San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly, one of the central bank’s most cautious policy-makers, also said on Wednesday she is open to a quicker wind-down of the bond-buying program if jobs and inflation data remain steady and that she could see the Fed’s policy-setting committee raising rates once or twice next year.

Inflation in October rose at its fastest annual pace in 31 years, testing the Fed’s working assumption for most of the year that the pandemic-induced burst would be temporary as supply bottlenecks eased and demand rotated from goods to services.

Some other policy-makers have said recently they too are now more comfortable with an interest rate hike earlier next year than previously anticipated, noting that the current pace of job gains would put the Fed on track to be near or at its maximum employment goal by the middle of 2022.

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