I wanted to post this before incoming Federal Reserve Chairman Kevin Warsh chaired his first FOMC meeting. The Washington Post’s editors urge the FOMC to make curbing inflation their highest priority:
Wednesday’s announcement of 4.2 percent inflation in May, up from 3.8 percent in April, is the worst reading from the Labor Department in three years. Prices are again rising at more than double the Federal Reserve’s target, but this isn’t an unsolvable problem.
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Monetary policy can help. The Federal Reserve will have its first meeting with Kevin Warsh as chair next week. The markets expect interest rates to hold steady but are now pricing in an increase later this year. In other words, investors are expecting Warsh to be independent, as he’s promised, and resist any outside pressure from Trump.
The editors of the Wall Street Journal are wary:
The core rate is still too high, but its decline to 0.2% from 0.4% in April suggests the oil shock isn’t spreading into the broader economy, at least so far. This is ammunition for those who think the Federal Reserve should look through the oil price shock when its Open Market Committee (FOMC) meets next week.
That’s the tough call for new Fed Chair Kevin Warsh as he faces FOMC members who may want to raise interest rates based on the move in overall consumer prices. Count us in the hold rates steady camp.
A rate hike doesn’t seem warranted until price increases start to spread beyond energy, and no one knows when the Iran war will end. The oil shock is a blow to economic growth, and it doesn’t need the Fed raising the price of borrowing to compound the blow.
This isn’t a repetition of the Fed’s happy talk in 2021 that inflation was “transitory.” That era’s inflation was caused by excessively easy monetary policy that accommodated blowout federal spending. The FOMC didn’t move its target interest rate from near-zero until March of 2022, if you can believe it. Inflation hit 9.1% on an annual basis three months later.
Today the fed funds rate is 3.5% to 3.75%. Inflation vigilance is always necessary, but caution may be the better part of that vigilance given the energy price shock.
That raises a question in my mind: how? How would the Fed lower inflation? To their credit the WaPo editors give at least a hat tip to fiscal policy as a driver. We’ve seen this game before—monetary policy and fiscal policy pulling in opposite directions.
More seriously, when Paul Volcker raised interest rates to curb inflation it was almost 50 years ago. The U. S. economy was very different than it is now. Today interest on the public debt is fully two orders of magnitude higher than it was then. Interest on the debt is the single largest item on the federal budget, the second highest if you ignore debt the government owes to itself. Higher interest rates would make that higher, perhaps not immediately but it would make it higher. The makes fiscal policy and monetary policy pulling in the same direction all the more important. When federal debt is very large, monetary tightening and fiscal consequences become increasingly intertwined, making coordination problems more severe than they were in Volcker’s era.
But we’ve clearly decided to monetize the debt. Persistent deficits create political pressure for lower interest rates and make inflation a tempting way to reduce the real burden of debt. That means inflation is “baked in” to our system. We’re going to have inflation for the foreseeable future. So, how? The incentives haven’t changed. Why will the Congress act differently than it has?
I would be remiss in not mentioning David Malpass’s remarkable op-ed in the Wall Street Journal. Here’s a snippet:
The Fed needs to be reformed. It hasn’t been achieving price stability. It has lost hundreds of billions of dollars after growing in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis. Its ample-reserves policy crowds out small businesses and market innovation. Its purchases of government bonds feed inequality.
The most pressing issue concerns the Fed’s obsolete economic models, which punish growth. When the economy or jobs grow fast, the Fed’s Keynesian models prescribe rate increases. These models are built on the view that growth causes inflation and the Fed should enforce a low speed limit.
The Fed’s inflation targeting sends wrong signals. Inflation is subject to distortion from fluctuations such as the current oil price shock and China’s dumping in the 2000s, which kept U.S. inflation artificially low, contributing to the 2008 financial crisis. The inflation model looks backward, misjudges regulatory burdens, undervalues energy production and ignores changes in the value of the dollar. It can’t keep pace with our fast-changing digital economy.
The movie The Red Shoes ends with the prima ballerina having committed suicide and her shoes being carried about the stage to where she would have been by a cast member. I have never seen an opinion piece that more closely emulated The Red Shoes. Mr. Malpass seems to have forgotten the interest rates during the Reagan Administration—they were the highest they had been in memory. If there is one lesson from the Reagan Administration it is not the importance of growth. It is that robust growth is not incompatible with high interest rates. So, again, I ask Mr. Malpass, how? If growth never creates inflationary pressure, why did inflation accelerate in the late 1960s, 1970s, and again after the extraordinary fiscal and monetary stimulus of 2020–21?






