He said that bright prospects for growth and employment will allow the Fed to continue raising its key policy rate at a gradual pace. The Fed boosted its benchmark rate three times last year and has signaled that it expects to raise rates another three times in 2018.
In a prepared statement, Powell praised Janet Yellen for the important contributions she made during her four years as the first woman to lead the Fed.
Referring to the wild swings in the stock market that occurred earlier this month, Powell said the Fed does "not see these developments as weighing heavily on the outlook for economic activity, the labor market and inflation."
Powell, who took office on February 5, was tapped last November as the new Fed leader after President Donald Trump decided to against offering Yellen a second term.
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Powell, a Republican, has been on the Fed's seven-member board since 2012.
The Fed has raised its policy rate by a quarter-point five times starting December 2015. Before then, it had kept its policy rate at a record low near zero for seven years in an effort to help the country recover from the deepest recession since the 1930s.
Many economists believe the Fed, which last raised rates in December, will hike again at its next meeting in March and some analysts think the Fed could hike more than three times this year, depending on what inflation does.
Investors have begun to worry that the Fed might accelerate the pace of its credit tightening if inflation, which has been dormant for years, starts to show signs of accelerating. The recent market turmoil was triggered by a report that wages for the 12 months ending in January had climbed at the fastest pace in eight years, raising concerns that inflation pressures could be growing.
"The robust job market should continue to support growth in household incomes and consumer spending, solid economic growth among our trading partners should lead to further gains in U.S. exports and upbeat business sentiment and strong sales growth will likely continue to boost business investment," Powell said.
Some economists have raised concerns that recent moves by the Trump administration and Congress to boost economic growth through USD 1.5 trillion in tax cuts and increased government spending could cause the Fed to worry about overheating and inflation.
Powell was delivering the Fed's semi-annual monetary report and testimony to Congress, appearing before the House Financial Services Committee on Tuesday and the Senate Banking Committee on Thursday.
During her four years as Fed leader, Yellen often received a rough reception from Republicans in the House who believed the Fed, through the extraordinary measures it used to combat the 2008 financial crisis and the deep recession that followed, had grown too powerful and too independent.
Yellen objected, arguing that the economy was too complicated to use a single rule to set interest rates. Powell has also voiced his opposition to a strict monetary rule but in his testimony he noted that the Fed "routinely consults monetary policy rules" to use as guidelines in setting policy.
"Personally, I find these rule prescriptions helpful," he said, while noting that careful judgments were still required in assessing the variables that go into the various rules.