
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell remains optimistic about bringing down inflation without damaging the job market.
"We've raised rates by 5 percentage points in 14 months, and the unemployment rate is 3.5%, pretty much where it was or even lower than it was when we started," Powell said on Wednesday at a news conference following the conclusion of the central bank's two-day monetary policy meeting.
Job openings remain high — JOLTS showed there were 1.6 available jobs for every job seeker — and there are indications of gradual cooling in the labor market, he said.
It wasn't supposed to be possible for job openings to decline as much as they've declined without unemployment going up, Powell said.
"It's possible that we can continue to have a cooling in the labor market without having the big increases in unemployment that have gone with many prior episodes," he said. "And that would be against history. I fully appreciate that would be against the pattern."
He added: "It's still possible that the case of avoiding a recession is, in my view, more likely than that of having a recession. The case of having a recession, I don't rule that out either: It's possible that we will have what I hope would be a mild recession."