THE FED CANNOT UNCLOG GLOBAL SHIPPING LANES
The following information was released by the
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Also published in Real Clear Markets
If there's one thing about which most Americans agree, it's that nobody can be sure what President
With such uncertainty overhanging the economy, it should come as no surprise that the Federal Reserves Open Market Committee held its interest-rate target steady at its most-recent meeting. So did the
The Open Market Committee's next meeting will take place at the end of this month, a week after the cease fire is scheduled to expire.
Speaking at Harvard on
The Hormuz shock was not a monetary problem. It was a structural problemand will remain so if negotiations between the
When prices rise in response to excessive demand, monetary tightening makes sense. Central banks should restrain inflation when it results from total economic spending (what economists call aggregate demand) growing too quickly. But when prices rise because a war disrupts supply of a crucial input, such as oil, tightening doesn't fix the problem. It merely slows down the rest of the economy to compensate. American families will have to pay more to fill up their tanks no matter what. Artificially depressing demand and risking a recession would make the financial hardship worse. What good is cheaper gas when youve lost your job?
This is not a new dilemma. Economists call it a supply shock, and it haunted monetary policymakers throughout the 1970s. When the
High inflation coincided with meager growth partly because policymakers kept reaching for tools unsuited to the challenge.
So far, weve avoided repeating that mistake. But the situation could easily change. If the Iranians close the Hormuz strait again, central banks might lose their nerve and prescribe a disinflationary cure thats worse than the disease. No good comes from mistaking a supply problem, which central banks cant control, for a demand problem, which they can.
Most economists advocate looking through such shocks, and theyre right to do so. When a price spike is clearly traceable to a temporary supply disruption, rather than to overheated domestic demand, central banks should stand pat.
Monetary policy has inherent limits. Ignoring those limits is how we get high prices and dwindling jobs at the same time.
The
This time, Fed Chair Powell,
But sometimes credibility requires knowing when not to act. Hence, holding steady in March was the right move.
Instead of monetary policy, the right responses to a supply disruption are themselves supply-side fixes: diplomacy to end hostilities, strategic petroleum reserves to bolster markets, and perhaps diversification to reduce dependence on a single energy source. These are the purview of elected officialsin the
The Hormuz shock was a reminder that some economic emergencies require political solutions. Demanding that central bankers handle every conceivable problem would set a dangerous precedent. Lets keep oil shocks and other supply-side disruptions off monetary policymakers plates.
Also published in Real Clear Markets


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