Chip shortage is ‘life-threatening for Americans,’ U.S. Commerce Secretary says

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U.S. Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo joins Yahoo Finance Live to discuss the Fed’s FOMC meeting, the global chip shortage, climate change, and the outlook for inflation.

Video Transcript

- Good to talk to you. Let's start with what has been playing out in the markets. We heard Jay Powell yesterday say very clearly that inflation is just too high. I mean, you could argue that's sort of stating the obvious here, but I know a lot of companies looking at this saying, well, what does this mean from a business investment standpoint? I wonder what conversations you're having with some of these companies and what they're saying about maybe potentially rethinking some of their investments.

GINA RAIMONDO: Yes, good morning. Thank you for having me. So in my conversations so far, I think that there is, I think, gratitude that the Fed took the significant action that they did. I think it's an understatement to say inflation's too high, and the steps Chairman Powell has taken are significant, and they show that the Fed really understands that they need to take serious action.

So I have not heard the concerns that you just said. I think by and large, when I talk to CEOs, they say their businesses are growing. Productivity is up. Growth is up. Earnings are up.

The concern is inflation, and folks have been waiting for this action from the Fed and I think the significant action is a step in the right direction.

- In many ways, Secretary, Brian and I were saying, the concern here is that the Fed alone can't control these price pressures that have been building. You're talking about supply chain constraints, geopolitical tensions stemming from Russia and Ukraine. I mean, how is the administration looking at the next step that it can take to try and curb prices, given that this really isn't just about the Fed mandate at this point?

GINA RAIMONDO: Yes. Yes. It is certainly true, as you say, that the Fed isn't the only lever, although it is by far the biggest lever. And during the pandemic, the beginning of the pandemic, the Fed had unprecedented expansionary monetary policy. So I do-- they have the strongest tools, and they're using them, and I hope that we will see an impact. As it relates to supply chain bottlenecks, you're exactly right. We are still working through that and only exacerbated, of course, by Putin's aggression in Ukraine. We're starting to see some benefits. The congestion at ports is down. We're training more truck drivers. We're seeing goods moving a bit more.

But certainly the semiconductor crisis, and it is that, remains, which is why we're pushing Congress to pass the Chips Act, which will allow us to up semiconductor manufacturing in the US. I think COVID wreaked havoc in our supply chains. Demand is still through the roof. Supply hasn't caught up, and in the administration, we're just going industry by industry doing everything we can to punch through and alleviate these bottlenecks.