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America's Economy Needs Tighter Monetary Policy Reader View PDF

The Federal Reserve should accelerate the tapering of its asset purchase program and tighten monetary policy to address high inflation. While some inflation is due to temporary pandemic-related supply and demand imbalances, inflation expectations are rising and prices are increasing across many categories of goods and services. If inflation becomes entrenched, it could further fuel wage and price increases. Waiting too long to tighten policy risks inflation spiraling out of control. The Fed can taper its asset purchases fast enough to potentially raise interest rates in March if needed to get ahead of inflation.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
87 views2 pages

America's Economy Needs Tighter Monetary Policy Reader View PDF

The Federal Reserve should accelerate the tapering of its asset purchase program and tighten monetary policy to address high inflation. While some inflation is due to temporary pandemic-related supply and demand imbalances, inflation expectations are rising and prices are increasing across many categories of goods and services. If inflation becomes entrenched, it could further fuel wage and price increases. Waiting too long to tighten policy risks inflation spiraling out of control. The Fed can taper its asset purchases fast enough to potentially raise interest rates in March if needed to get ahead of inflation.

Uploaded by

Davi Marcelino
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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www.economist.

com
/leaders/americas-economy-needs-tighter-monetary-policy/21806694

America’s economy needs tighter monetary policy


Dec 11th 2021 ⋮ 5-6 minutes

Power off the money printer

America’s economy needs tighter monetary policy

Why the Fed should raise interest rates soon

THE FEDERAL RESERVE has spent most of 2021 saying that high inflation would be
temporary. And yet price rises have persistently overshot forecasts, reaching 5% in
October, on the Fed’s preferred measure, even as employment remains about 4m short of
its pre-pandemic level. On December 15th the Fed will decide whether to tighten monetary
policy, probably by accelerating the pace at which it “tapers” its monthly purchases of
assets, mostly government bonds, which are currently running at $90bn per month. It
should go ahead and take action. Though uncertainty is high, the Fed must rapidly
respond to the data it has today and then adjust as necessary as conditions evolve. Those
data indicate that it has already fallen behind.

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The rise in prices cannot be explained by a few shortages, such as of second-hand cars.
In October the median item in the consumer-price index was 3.1% more expensive than a
year earlier. Clothes prices were up 4.3%, shelter (such as rent) was 3.5% dearer, and
transport cost 4.5% more. In the third quarter private-sector wages and salaries grew at
an annualised rate of 6.5%—too fast to be compatible with the Fed’s 2% inflation target
without incredible productivity growth.

It is true that temporary factors have driven up inflation. The $1.9trn fiscal stimulus
President Joe Biden signed in March will not be repeated (the outlay proposed in the
Democrats’ social-spending bill is more spread out and partly offset by tax rises). During
the pandemic, consumers have binged on goods. Supply chains have been bunged up,
especially as the world’s factories have faced lockdowns and staff absences. Despite an
abnormal number of Americans out of work, firms have struggled to fill vacancies.

However, predicting when these pandemic-related forces will ease is a fool’s errand,
especially now that the Omicron variant is spreading. For as long as inflation remains
high, there is a growing danger that it will become entrenched. The New York Fed
estimates that the median consumer expects prices to rise at an annual pace of 4.2% over
the next three years, up from 3% in January 2021, suggesting they may demand higher
wages. Rising inflation expectations also reduce the effective cost of credit, because
inflation makes debts easier to repay. The real interest rate over five years on government
bonds is about -1.6%, lower than in almost all of 2020, when the economy was far weaker.

The latest argument from some doves is that nominal GDP, or total cash spending in the
economy, is merely on its pre-crisis trend. This proves that pandemic-related distortions,
not excessive demand, have driven up prices, they say. Yet though this argument held in
the third quarter, it may already be out of date. Nominal GDP is expected to grow at annual
rates of over 10% in the fourth quarter, compared with the trend rate of just 4%. America is
seeing an unusual surge in demand, not just constrained supply.

Tighter monetary policy is therefore justified. But if you believe the Fed’s theory of how its
asset purchases work, every bond it buys adds fresh stimulus to the economy. It follows
that merely tapering the pace of purchases is not tightening. So why not raise interest
rates instead? The answer is that the Fed is bound by its past guidance that it would stop
buying bonds before raising rates, and that it would avoid ending purchases abruptly.
Abandoning that framework would lead investors to question the central bank’s
trustworthiness and to expect an excessive number of additional interest-rate increases in
2022.

The good news is that the Fed can taper fast enough to let it raise interest rates in March.
If between now and then the pandemic greatly worsens, consumers slash their spending
on goods or many missing workers return to the labour force, monetary policymakers can
change course again. But they must give themselves scope to raise rates soon. In an
ideal world it is an option that would already be on the table. ■

For more expert analysis of the biggest stories in economics, business and markets, sign
up to Money Talks, our weekly newsletter.

Dig deeper

All our stories relating to the pandemic can be found on our coronavirus hub. You can also
find trackers showing the global roll-out of vaccines, excess deaths by country and the
virus’s spread across Europe.

This article appeared in the Leaders section of the print edition under the headline "Wind
down the money printer"

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