Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic speaks with Yahoo Finance [Transcript]

Raphael Bostic, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, joined Yahoo Finance to discuss his outlook on inflation and the central bank's response.

Below is a transcript of his appearance, taped and aired on May 10.

-

BRIAN CHEUNG: Hi I'm Brian Cheung here on the sidelines of the Financial Markets Conference hosted by the Atlanta Fed alongside the Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic. President Bostic, great to see you.

RAPHAEL BOSTIC: Good to see you too, Brian.

BRIAN CHEUNG: It's beautiful here in Amelia Island, Florida racing back in person again, but of course the big subject of the day is what the Fed is going to do next. So we got that 50 basis point increase last week, the largest move since May 2000. Simple question, I guess is: What's next?

RAPHAEL BOSTIC: Well for me, I think the overarching perspective is that inflation is high and it's too high and we got to do something to work against it. So we've taken good first steps. I think 25 basis points, ratcheting up to 50 because of where we've gone. I think that's the pace we need to stay at. 50 basis point increases maybe for the next two, or perhaps three meetings. Let's just keep this moving and make sure that we're doing all we can to get inflation under control.

BRIAN CHEUNG: So for a lot of Fed officials it seems like the goal is to get to neutral at least for right now, which is the short term interest rate that's not stimulative nor restrictive to the economy. What's your estimate of neutral and how fast does the Fed need to get there?

RAPHAEL BOSTIC: So you know, neutral is a concept and so it's not as if there's an equation exactly where it is. For me, it's somewhere between 2 and 2.5 percent. And then in terms of getting there, I think we just need to get there in a sort of a methodical way, so that we are really signaling the pace of where we're going. And then of course, we have to wait and see what happens. So as we are moving, we haven't really moved at a 50 basis point increment for many, many years. So there is still some uncertainty as to how the economy will respond. And so we'll be watching as we go along, but my view is like strong and steady, and let's get there and be very intentional about and purposeful about getting to that level.

BRIAN CHEUNG: So a lot of chatter, speculation about whether or not moving the Overton window from 25 basis points moves to 50 basis points moves would spur, eventually, a 75 basis point move. What's your assessment of whether or not that's something that could be on the table?