Critics call for climate action as Federal Reserve event kicks off in Jackson Hole

This isn’t the first time critics have cited the omission of climate change at a high-profile Federal Reserve event.
An attendee of the 2024 Jackson Hole Economic Policy Symposium stands in the Jackson Lake Lodge, donning a cowboy hat.
An attendee of the 2024 Jackson Hole Economic Policy Symposium stands in the Jackson Lake Lodge, donning a cowboy hat. (Hanna Merzbach / Wyoming Public Media)

Make our newscast part of your daily listening routine. Subscribe on Spotify (or wherever you listen to podcasts). 

Bankers, policymakers and economists are flocking to Jackson Hole, Wyo. today, Aug. 21, for one of the highest-profile events in monetary policy.

A regional Federal Reserve bank is putting on its annual economic symposium, this year focusing on the changing labor market. But some critics say the official agenda misses the mark by not mentioning climate change.

Advertisement

That includes Sarah Bloom Raskin. The former Deputy Secretary of the U.S. Treasury said severe temperatures are already hurting labor markets.

“ Extreme heat alone is costing the U.S. economy approximately $100 billion per year in labor productivity impacts,” Bloom Raskin, also a former member of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors, said in a press call.

She joined scholars, activists and Rep. Sean Casten (D-Illinois) in sounding the alarm about the everyday impacts of climate change on the economy.

”When we look at the price of coffee, when we look at the price of olive oil, these are the kinds of effects that are, in part, climate driven,” Bloom Raskin added.

David Arkush, the director of the climate program at Public Citizen, a consumer advocacy nonprofit, said the symposium is missing an opportunity.

“Despite these significant impacts, the Federal Reserve has altogether ignored climate change as a factor in monetary policy making,” Arkush said.

This isn’t the first time critics have cited the omission of climate change at a high-profile Federal Reserve event.

The criticism comes after the U.S. central banking system left a global climate organization of international central banks and disbanded committees studying the issue earlier this year.

Arkush and others urged the Federal Reserve to research and consider climate change’s impacts on the economy.

A representative of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, which is putting on the event, and also has a branch in Denver, didn’t respond to a request for comment.

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell will give a highly anticipated speech tomorrow, Aug. 22, potentially signaling what’s next for interest rates. That starts at 8 a.m. MT and can be livestreamed here.

This story was produced by the Mountain West News Bureau, a collaboration between Wyoming Public Media, Nevada Public Radio, Boise State Public Radio in Idaho, KUNR in Nevada, KUNC in Colorado and KANW in New Mexico, with support from affiliate stations across the region. Funding for the Mountain West News Bureau is provided in part by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.

Want More Stories Like This?

Donate any amount to support independent media in the Tetons.

KHOL 89.1 Jackson Hole Community Radio Membership Support Ad

About Hanna Merzbach | Wyoming Public Media

Hanna is a Wyoming Public Radio/Mountain West News Bureau reporter based in Teton County. She got her start in radio at KHOL where her award-winning work covering women's health access in the region landed on NPR and stations across the Rockies. In her free time, you can find Hanna scaling rock walls or adventuring in the mountains.

Related Stories

Pup program helps kids read

Pup program helps kids read

As Wyoming lawmakers gear up to consider a bill to improve reading in public schools, one Jackson nonprofit is using “pet therapy” to do the same.

Pin It on Pinterest