Cleveland Fed President Loretta Mester speaks with Yahoo Finance [Transcript]

Loretta Mester, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, joined Yahoo Finance to discuss her outlook on inflation and the central bank's response.

Below is a transcript of her appearance, aired live on May 10.

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BRIAN CHEUNG Welcome back to Yahoo Finance. I'm Brian Cheung here live on site at the Atlanta Fed’s Financial Markets Conference in beautiful Amelia Island and I'm here with Cleveland Fed President Loretta Mester. President Mester, so it's great to see you and also in person for the first time.

LORETTA MESTER: Exactly, thank you for having me on.

BRIAN CHEUNG: So nice to be here in Florida. To kick off this conversation just about Fed policy, or obviously the big move happening last week with the Federal Reserve raising interest rates by 50 basis points, in your view, what's the next steps for the Fed?

LORETTA MESTER: Well, we have to get inflation under control. And that means moving the interest rate up. We have to move it up at a pace that will get that inflation under control. By under control, I mean, turning down, right? So looking at the monthly numbers and seeing that it's actually moving back down. And that'll be a challenge, no doubt. Because there are a lot of things that are affecting inflation now on the supply side that aren’t really affected by monetary policy. But we’re really committed to be doing what we need to do with our policy tools to get demand better in line with that constrained supply and inflationary pressures.

BRIAN CHEUNG: What underscores the need to move is the fact that we got an interest rate bump in a size that we haven't seen since May of 2000. I'm wondering if you feel that more outsized bumps would be needed? Is it on the table for a 75 basis point hike in the future?

LORETTA MESTER: Well, there's always something on the table, right? And, you know, [Fed Chair Jerome Powell] in the press conference said that he was comfortable with, you know, moving in another couple of meetings at 50. I'm certainly comfortable with that. I think we're going to have to be very careful of evaluating whether we’re actually seeing that inflation move down. So we'll do the next couple of meetings. If things stay the way they are looking now. I think 50 at the next two meetings makes perfect sense. We’re going to have to then evaluate whether we either have to speed that up — if you don't see inflation moving back down — or if we see demand coming down faster than we expect it to, we might be able to go a little slower but we’ve gotta be committed to that inflation, those inflation numbers down.