Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility

A First Look at Fresno State’s Quarterback Battle

20 hours ago

Israeli Columnist Alleges Ethnic Cleansing Plan in Gaza

20 hours ago

Tesla to Roll out Bay Area Robotaxis With Safety Drivers, Report Says

22 hours ago

Thailand and Cambodia Exchange Heavy Artillery Fire as Border Battle Expands

22 hours ago

California Cannot Require Background Checks to Buy Ammunition, US Appeals Court Rules

2 days ago

TikTok Will Go Dark in US Without Chinese Approval of Sale Deal, Lutnick Says

2 days ago

Fresno County Authorities Still Searching for Missing Mother and Infant

2 days ago
The Fed Ignores Inflation at Its Peril
Inside-Sources
By InsideSources.com
Published 7 years ago on
February 5, 2018

Share


Opinion by
Desmond Lachman

InsideSources.com
It is often said that policymakers who forget history are bound to repeat it. One wonders whether the same might be said of the Federal Reserve in its seeming current disregard of the lessons from the country’s previous inflationary episodes. Despite the growing number of reasons to be concerned that the Fed’s inflation target will soon be breached, the Fed shows little sign of fearing a new bout of inflation through its inaction.
Among the clearest indications of the Fed’s current nonchalant attitude toward inflation risk is its basic adherence to the interest rate path that it set for itself at the start of 2017. It has done so despite the fact that the U.S. economy is currently at very close to full employment and is growing at a healthy clip. It has also done so even though since the start of the Trump administration there have been a number of basic changes that should be raising red flags for the Fed that the U.S. economy might be on the verge of overheating.
One of the changes that one would have thought would have induced the Fed toward a more aggressive monetary policy stance than it has been pursuing has been the strong increase in U.S. stock market prices. Since the start of the Trump administration, U.S. equities have increased by around 30 percent, adding more than $6 trillion to U.S. household wealth.
The Fed’s own estimates suggest that such a large increase in household wealth of itself should increase aggregate demand by the equivalent of more than 1 percent of GDP. That would make the recent stock market increase equivalent to several Fed interest rate cuts in terms of its effect on stimulating an already buoyant economy.

Inflation Risk Complacency

Another factor that one would have thought would have shaken the Fed out of its inflation risk complacency has been the U.S. dollar’s marked decline. Over the past year, the greenback has slumped by more than 13 percent, even before Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin began talking the dollar down last week. According to IMF estimates, over time such a large dollar decline must in itself be expected to boost U.S. demand by more than 1 percent of GDP and to add more than 0.25 percent to the U.S. core inflation rate.


U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin
Yet another factor adding fuel to the overheating-risk fire, which the Fed also seems to be ignoring, has been the recent large unfunded U.S. tax cut. According to the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office, this tax cut will meaningfully increase the country’s budget deficit and increase the size of its public debt by around $1.5 trillion over the next decade. Meanwhile, according to IMF estimates, the tax cut could be adding around 0.5 percent of GDP to demand in each of the next three years.
Previous historical experience would suggest that, with the U.S. economy at close to full employment and with it being strongly stimulated by a combination of buoyant equity prices, a slumping dollar and a big tax cut, the Fed has two choices. It can either get itself ahead of the curve by raising interest rates at a more rapid pace than it has been doing to date in an effort to nip an incipient inflation pickup in the bud. Alternatively, it can leave itself at the mercy of the bond market vigilantes who must be expected to come out of the woodwork at the first sign that inflation is picking up.

Fed Needs to be More Aggressive

One must hope that the Fed soon opts for a more aggressive monetary policy than it has been pursuing to date. By doing so, it might spare itself from the wrath of the bond market vigilantes that could add to financial market volatility and that could lead to an abrupt bursting of the global equity market bubble. However, with the Fed soon to be dominated by President Trump appointees wedded to a low-interest rate policy, I am not holding my breath that the Fed will make the right policy choice.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Desmond Lachman is a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute. He was formerly a deputy director in the International Monetary Fund’s Policy Development and Review Department and the chief emerging market economic strategist at Salomon Smith Barney. He wrote this for InsideSources.com.

DON'T MISS

What Are Fresno Real Estate Experts Predicting for 2025 and Beyond?

DON'T MISS

First California EV Mandates Hit Automakers This Year. Most Are Not Even Close

DON'T MISS

Tulare Officer Injured in Crash While Trying to Save Unresponsive Infant. Child Dies at Hospital

DON'T MISS

PBS Has a Future by Leaving the Past Behind: Opinion

DON'T MISS

Fresno Council Candidate Rassamni Says City Is Investigating Him Amid Allegations by Arias

DON'T MISS

Fresno First Responders Talk Person Down off Parking Garage Ledge

DON'T MISS

Oregon Schools Face Federal Probe Over Transgender Athletes

DON'T MISS

US Judge Reaffirms Nationwide Injunction Blocking Trump Executive Order on Birthright Citizenship

DON'T MISS

White House Will Release $5.5 Billion for Schools, After Surprise Delay

DON'T MISS

Kern County Fire Issues Evacuation Warnings for Pearl Fire Near Lake Isabella

DON'T MISS

Gaza Running out of Specialized Food to Save Malnourished Children

DON'T MISS

New Madera Bypass Project Aims to Ease Traffic on Highway 41 Near Tesoro Viejo

UP NEXT

PBS Has a Future by Leaving the Past Behind: Opinion

UP NEXT

Fresno Council Candidate Rassamni Says City Is Investigating Him Amid Allegations by Arias

UP NEXT

Fresno First Responders Talk Person Down off Parking Garage Ledge

UP NEXT

Oregon Schools Face Federal Probe Over Transgender Athletes

UP NEXT

US Judge Reaffirms Nationwide Injunction Blocking Trump Executive Order on Birthright Citizenship

UP NEXT

White House Will Release $5.5 Billion for Schools, After Surprise Delay

UP NEXT

Kern County Fire Issues Evacuation Warnings for Pearl Fire Near Lake Isabella

UP NEXT

Gaza Running out of Specialized Food to Save Malnourished Children

UP NEXT

New Madera Bypass Project Aims to Ease Traffic on Highway 41 Near Tesoro Viejo

UP NEXT

Key Player in California’s Water Wars Embraces Controversial Newsom Plan

Fresno First Responders Talk Person Down off Parking Garage Ledge

16 hours ago

Oregon Schools Face Federal Probe Over Transgender Athletes

17 hours ago

US Judge Reaffirms Nationwide Injunction Blocking Trump Executive Order on Birthright Citizenship

17 hours ago

White House Will Release $5.5 Billion for Schools, After Surprise Delay

18 hours ago

Kern County Fire Issues Evacuation Warnings for Pearl Fire Near Lake Isabella

18 hours ago

Gaza Running out of Specialized Food to Save Malnourished Children

19 hours ago

New Madera Bypass Project Aims to Ease Traffic on Highway 41 Near Tesoro Viejo

19 hours ago

Key Player in California’s Water Wars Embraces Controversial Newsom Plan

20 hours ago

A First Look at Fresno State’s Quarterback Battle

20 hours ago

Israeli Columnist Alleges Ethnic Cleansing Plan in Gaza

20 hours ago

Tulare Officer Injured in Crash While Trying to Save Unresponsive Infant. Child Dies at Hospital

A Tulare police officer was injured in a traffic collision Friday while responding to a medical emergency involving an unresponsive infant, ...

15 hours ago

15 hours ago

Tulare Officer Injured in Crash While Trying to Save Unresponsive Infant. Child Dies at Hospital

Signs supporting NPR outside its headquarters in Washington on March 26, 2025. The Trump administration has accused NPR and PBS of using public funds to produce biased coverage and “left-wing propaganda.” (Eric Lee/The New York Times)
16 hours ago

PBS Has a Future by Leaving the Past Behind: Opinion

AJ Rassamni and Miguel Arias blackstone
16 hours ago

Fresno Council Candidate Rassamni Says City Is Investigating Him Amid Allegations by Arias

Fresno first responders spent over two hours safely rescuing a person in crisis from the edge of a downtown parking garage Friday, July 25, 2025,morning. (Fresno FD)
16 hours ago

Fresno First Responders Talk Person Down off Parking Garage Ledge

United States Department of Education logo and U.S. flag are seen in this illustration taken April 23, 2025. (Reuters File)
17 hours ago

Oregon Schools Face Federal Probe Over Transgender Athletes

President Donald Trump speaks to the media, after the U.S. Supreme Court dealt a blow to the power of federal judges by restricting their ability to grant broad legal relief in cases as the justices acted in a legal fight over President Donald Trump's bid to limit birthright citizenship, in the Press Briefing Room at the White House in Washington D.C., June 27, 2025. (Reuters File)
17 hours ago

US Judge Reaffirms Nationwide Injunction Blocking Trump Executive Order on Birthright Citizenship

Students head to the buses at the end of the day at a high school in Cedar Hill, Mo., on Sept. 14, 2022. The White House will release $5.5 billion in frozen education funds, administration officials announced on Friday, July 25, bringing an end to a chaotic saga of the administration’s making, which had sent school districts scrambling with weeks to go before the school year. (Whitney Curtis/The New York Times)
18 hours ago

White House Will Release $5.5 Billion for Schools, After Surprise Delay

Kern County fire officials have issued evacuation warnings for two zones near Lake Isabella as the Pearl Fire threatens the area. (Kern County FD)
18 hours ago

Kern County Fire Issues Evacuation Warnings for Pearl Fire Near Lake Isabella

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend