Fed's delayed inflation fight sparks fears of a policy overcorrection
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[October 05, 2022] By
Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Faced with mounting
evidence that loose U.S. monetary policy contributed to the breakout of
inflation last year, the Federal Reserve now faces the risk it jumped
too far the other way with its plans to fight price pressures through
continued aggressive interest rate hikes even as the world economy
wobbles.
The warning signs of a policy overcorrection have intensified as the
U.S. central bank's intent to "raise and hold" its benchmark overnight
interest rate touched off a global asset repricing - stocks and
currencies have fallen and borrowing costs for governments and
corporations have risen - that some analysts worry has outpaced the
Fed's ability to assess the impact of its policies.
Broad measures of financial conditions have tightened fast in U.S.
markets. Economists at Morgan Stanley recently estimated that between
inflation and stricter Fed policy, dollar liquidity in the United
States, Europe, Japan and China has declined by $4 trillion since March
and is falling fast.
The current path "will lead to intolerable economic and financial
stress," Michael Wilson, an equity analyst at the investment bank, wrote
on Sunday. "The first question to ask is, when does the U.S. dollar
become a U.S. problem" through global and market impacts that start to
influence the American economy and lead Fed officials to reevaluate the
pace of their monetary tightening.
The Fed raised interest rates at its Sept. 20-21 policy meeting by
three-quarters of a percentage point for the third time in a row, and
indicated further large increases were in the offing later this year.
So far, U.S. central bank officials insist nothing in the global
marketplace has changed the game plan, even as analysts parse every
adverb in policymakers' public remarks for signs that a lighter-touch
Fed may emerge at next month's meeting.
This reading of the tea leaves was on display last week when some
investors interpreted Fed Vice Chair Lael Brainard's reference to
"deliberately" raising interest rates as a signal the central bank might
slow down the pace of tightening.
The shift in monetary policy this year has been the most dramatic in
decades, with the Fed's policy rate rising a full 3 percentage points to
the current 3.00%-3.25% range. While Fed projections released last month
showed officials at the median penciling in another large rate hike at
the Nov. 1-2 meeting, the group was closely divided.
NO RUNNING AWAY
In interviews and public statements over the past week, however, Fed
policymakers, far from concern over rattled asset markets, have laid out
detailed accounts of what they got wrong on inflation over the past two
years - including mistakes in their own policymaking - and their intent
to fix it.
"Inflation is turning out to be much more persistent than we thought it
was going to be," Cleveland Fed President Loretta Mester said on the
sidelines of a conference at the regional bank.
The list of culprits is long and includes things, like unexpected
changes in people's choices over what to buy and where to work and the
surprising inflexibility of U.S. supply chains, over which the Fed has
little influence.
But while those developments might have caused relative shifts in
prices, Mester and others at the Fed now believe it was the joint
evolution of monetary and fiscal policy over the last two years that
created the more persistent increase in the underlying price level that
the Fed is now trying to arrest.
Pandemic-era fiscal policy was meant to create a "bridge" to help
households and businesses through the COVID-19 crisis. But the more than
$5 trillion in payments, loans and other aid, with new stimulus still
being rolled out as late as the spring of 2021, built a world-class
surge of cash that fueled purchases of goods and services that the
economy strained to provide.
Fed policy, oriented to fight the pandemic and ensure U.S. workers found
a pathway back to jobs, remained loose throughout, with low interest
rates that were meant to encourage spending in effect until only
recently.
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An eagle tops the U.S. Federal
Reserve building's facade in Washington, July 31, 2013.
REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst/File Photo/File Photo
"The reason you saw (inflation) get embedded is because ... we
actually needed to raise our funds rate, or fiscal policy had to
adjust to be less accommodative," Mester said last week. In the
moment "there was a feeling that policy wasn't too accommodative,
because it was a huge pandemic shock ... One thing we learned is the
economy is actually much more resilient than people thought it was
going to be."
Acting otherwise would have been difficult.
In March 2021, for example, when President Joe Biden's $1.9 trillion
American Rescue Plan was enacted and the last rounds of stimulus
checks were being written, the unemployment rate was still 6%, the
rollout of coronavirus vaccines was at an early stage, and inflation
was only beginning to percolate. By the Fed's preferred measure,
inflation was running at an annual pace of 1.7% in February 2021,
below the central bank's 2% target.
Though it spiked in March to 2.5% and kept climbing, shifting policy
at that point would have put the Fed in direct conflict with fiscal
authorities who were still fighting to blunt the economic fallout of
the pandemic - an uncomfortable position akin to what Bank of
England officials are facing after the government of new British
Prime Minister Liz Truss announced major tax cuts.
That would have been an exceptional bit of foresight, taken in an
era when uncertainty has ruled and just as Biden's presidency was
taking shape.
"How could you not say we called it wrong. I don't run away from
that," Richmond Fed President Thomas Barkin said in comments to
reporters last week in Virginia. "The implicit perspective was this
was going to be a demand recovery problem. So you got to do
everything you can to demand" with policies to boost consumption and
income.
In hindsight, "how much did we have to actually have to do?"
'MOVED THE NEEDLE'
The Fed now faces a version of the same problem: How long to wait
for evidence that inflation, now running at more than three times
the central bank's target, is falling before adjusting the pace of
rate increases or even the endpoint of the policy rate.
Those concerned about the torrid and insistent pace of Fed rate
increases argue that inflation is on the verge of turning, and that
continued aggressive rate hikes could push the economy towards
higher-than-necessary unemployment - the jobless rate is currently
3.7% - and slower-than-necessary growth.
"They have moved the needle ... I am not sure they need to be as
aggressive as they think they need to be," said Ian Shepherdson,
chief economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics and an advocate of the
view that much recent inflation can be traced to rising profit
margins that he thinks will quickly reverse as demand wanes.
If that proves true, and oil prices don't spike again, a closely
watched Fed gauge of inflation could be collapsing next year,
Shepherdson estimates.
That's an argument Brainard also mentioned in a recent paper,
suggesting that falling profit margins could "make an important
contribution to reduced pricing pressures."
But the timing is uncertain, and Fed Chair Jerome Powell has said
the "clock is ticking" on the central bank to show it can make
progress on inflation in order to keep its credibility with markets
and the American public.
Even after listing the forces she thought could pull inflation down
and mentioning the "risks associated with overtightening," Brainard
said the Fed remained singularly focused.
"We have both the capacity and the responsibility to maintain
anchored inflation expectations and price stability," she said. "We
are in this for as long as it takes to get inflation down."
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Paul Simao)
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