Will the Fed be involved in politics in 2024?
2024 is a big political year for the country. More so than in other years, decisions having national ramifications will be scrutinized for their potential impacts on election outcomes. This means those making the decisions will have to consider how their choices are interpreted.
Without question, one institution that will be front and center in this situation will be the
In its role as the country's central bank, the Fed has important regulatory responsibilities.
Yet perhaps the Fed's most prominent role comes from the Congressional mandate for the Fed to use its influence over interest rates and cash availability to help create a "Goldilocks" economy of both low unemployment and low inflation.
The last four years have shown the Fed flexing its muscles over the economy. During the pandemic years of 2020 and 2021, the Fed worked to lower unemployment — which had reached 14% — by pushing interest rates to historic lows and increasing the money supply by trillions. Then, when the inflation rate was headed to double-digit rates in 2022, the Fed reversed course by raising interest rates and pulling cash out of the economy.
As 2024 begins, it appears the Fed is again in transition. The unemployment rate has remained low and the annual inflation rate is near 3%, close to the Fed's goal of 2%.
Because this is a big political year, in some ways the Fed is in a no-win situation. If the Fed aggressively cuts its key interest rate, interest rates like mortgage rates, credit card rates and other borrowing rates will likely follow. More people will be able to buy homes, vehicles and other items, lifting consumer confidence and happiness. And, if people are more confident and happier, they may be more likely to reward incumbent politicians by voting for them. In reaction, opponents to the incumbents may cry foul, arguing the Fed's interest rate cuts tipped the scales in favor of incumbents.
Conversely, if the Fed doesn't reduce interest rates, or if it reduces rates very slowly, the opposite sentiments could emerge. Incumbents could conclude the Fed is prolonging consumers' displeasure with high interest rates, and this unhappiness could be directed at incumbents in the voting booth. At the same time, opponents could try to link high interest rates to incumbents, giving opponents an electoral boost.
A second example involves President
Perhaps the most famous example of the Fed's potential role in an election is President
Nixon was overwhelmingly reelected, but the annual inflation rate eventually jumped to 12% in 1974.
As these examples demonstrate, Fed policies can impact elections, which is why both incumbents and challengers have an interest in following and understanding the
But my perception — if I may offer it — is that the Fed guards its reputation and uses its policies in the best way for pursuing the mandate of achieving low unemployment and low inflation.
Analyses will be offered from a variety of perspectives. And then, once the elections are over, each of us will have to decide if the Fed's policy decisions had any impacts on the results.
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