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Yellen Says U.S. Is Considering New Sanctions on Iran and Hamas

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Treasury Secretary Janet L. Yellen said on Wednesday that the Israel-Gaza war represents a potential concern for the global economy and signaled that additional U.S. sanctions could be coming in response to the attack on Israel by Hamas.

Questions about the economic impact of the war were growing as Ms. Yellen offered a forceful defense of Israel and pushed back on the notion that U.S. sanctions against Iran тАФ a key backer of Hamas тАФ have become too lenient. Ms. Yellen said that the Treasury Department continued to review its sanctions on Iran, Hamas and Hezbollah, the Lebanese militant group that is also a longtime adversary of Israel.

тАЬWe have not in any way relaxed our sanctions on Iranian oil,тАЭ Ms. Yellen said at a news conference on the sidelines of the annual meetings of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank in Marrakesh, Morocco. тАЬWe have sanctions on Hamas, on Hezbollah, and this is something that we have been constantly looking at and using information as it becomes available to tighten sanctions.тАЭ

She added: тАЬWe will continue to do that.тАЭ

The Treasury secretary also did not rule out the possibility of reversing a decision made last month тАФ to unfreeze $6 billion of Iranian funds in exchange for the release of American hostages тАФ if it is determined that Iran was involved in the attack by Hamas.

At the time of the exchange, the United States informed Iran that it had transferred about $6 billion in Iranian oil revenue from South Korea to a Qatari bank account. The money is supposed to be used only for food, medicine and other humanitarian goods.

тАЬThese are funds that are sitting in Qatar that were made available purely for humanitarian purposes and the funds have not been touched,тАЭ Ms. Yellen said, adding: тАЬI wouldnтАЩt take anything off the table in terms of future possible actions.тАЭ

The crisis in Israel poses a new challenge for the world economy and the Biden administration, which has spent the last year working to combat inflation in the United States and to corral energy prices that have become volatile because of RussiaтАЩs war in Ukraine. Another war in the Middle East complicates those efforts by threatening to constrain oil supplies and send prices higher.

The Treasury secretary said that geopolitical тАЬshocksтАЭ continued to pose risks to the world economic outlook.

тАЬOf course, the situation in Israel poses additional concerns,тАЭ Ms. Yellen said.

However, Ms. Yellen said that she continued to believe that the United States economy could achieve a so-called soft landing тАФ where inflation eases without a recession тАФ but that she was closely watching for any economic fallout from the new conflict in the Middle East.

тАЬWhile weтАЩre monitoring potential economic impacts from the crisis, IтАЩm not really thinking of that as a major driver of the global economic outlook,тАЭ Ms. Yellen said. тАЬWe will see what impact it has; thus far, I donтАЩt think weтАЩve seen anything suggesting it will be very significant.тАЭ

Ms. YellenтАЩs remarks came as international policymakers gathered in Morocco for a week of meetings and as the global economic recovery is losing momentum. The prospect of a new regional conflict gave other policymakers more reason to feel anxious about a sluggish world economy that has been battered by war, a pandemic and inflation in recent years. Central banks around the globe have been raising interest rates to tame rapid inflation, and investors had begun to hope that a recent slowdown in price gains could signal an end to those rate increases.

тАЬI think central bank governors are concerned about what might happen to energy prices if the Israel-Gaza conflict were to turn into a bigger regional conflict and have implications for supply of oil on markets,тАЭ Gita Gopinath, the first deputy managing director of the I.M.F., said in an interview on Wednesday.

Ms. Gopinath added that higher oil prices could elevate prices more broadly, complicating interest rate decisions for central bankers. She suggested that it was too soon to say how the economic impact of the conflict in the Middle East might compare to the effects of the war in Ukraine, but that overlapping crises was a headwind.

тАЬThe geopolitical risks are certainly piling up in RussiaтАЩs invasion of Ukraine and weтАЩre seeing now in Israel and Gaza,тАЭ she said.

That sentiment was echoed on Wednesday by Ajay Banga, the World Bank president, who said at a news conference that he now expected interest rates to be тАЬhigher for longerтАЭ despite signs that inflation is cooling.

тАЬI believe that wars are completely and extremely challenging for central banks who are trying to find their way out of a very difficult situation,тАЭ Mr. Banga said.

It is not yet clear what steps the Biden administration would take to contain oil prices if the Israel-Gaza war intensifies or how that might affect its efforts to curb RussiaтАЩs oil revenues.

Ms. Yellen suggested on Wednesday that the тАЬprice capтАЭ policy that the G7 devised last year, which forbids Russia from selling oil over $60 a barrel using western banking and insurance services, had been successful.

тАЬGlobal energy prices have been largely unchanged while Russia has had to either sell oil at a significant discount or spend huge amounts on its alternative ecosystem,тАЭ she said.

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