It
was understated by the unemployment rate, at 6%, she said.
She
called for the slack to be "more nuanced" in the way it was assessed,
due to "considerable uncertainty" about the level of employment.
Speaking
to an annual Fed conference in the mountain resort of Jackson Hole, Wyoming,
she also remained relaxed about the low interest rate policy.
Ms
Yellen said the
"underutilisation of labour resources" still
"remained significant" to the US economy.
If
inflation went up more rapidly than expected, she said, increases in the
federal funds rate target could "come sooner" than expected and
"could be more rapid thereafter".
'Deliberately vague'
But
she added: "Of course, if economic performance turns out to be
disappointing and progress toward our goals proceeds more slowly than we
expect, then the future path of interest rates likely would be more
accommodative than we currently anticipate."
Luke
Bartholomew, manager at Aberdeen Asset Management Investment, said Ms Yellen
was being "deliberately vague" by telling the market "nothing to
see here".
"Unfortunately
that's just making markets more desperate for answers," he added.
"Her strategy is probably to deliberately underwhelm.
"She's
saying the Fed might raise rates soon but then again might not. That kind of
vagueness suits her because it leaves options open."
He
said there was "some hint" she was still concerned about the labour
market.
"Which
is good because one of the biggest questions about the US economy is just how
many of the long term unemployed will ever return to the labour market.
"The
fear is that no one, least of all Janet Yellen, knows the answer," he
added.
BBC
Business
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