The Fed’s Target Is Workers or Labor . . .
The Fed’s Target Is Workers, Project Syndicate, James K. Galbraith, January 2022
A year and a half later and the Fed is still trying to slay the dragon. They stab it with their steely knives, But they just can’t kill the beast. So it seems, the Feds losing battle is with Labor, direct Labor is the smallest portion of manufacturing. Without labor there is no product, just bets on the outcome of the economy.
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By announcing forthcoming interest-rate hikes at a time when total US employment is still below its 2019 level, the Federal Reserve is once again bending to pressure from economists and financiers. Whether or not it understands what it is doing, its war on “inflation” is really a war on American workers.
Steamboat Springs, Colorado, US Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell has now committed to putting US monetary policy on a course of rising interest rates, which could boost the short-term rate (on federal funds and treasury bills) by at least 200 basis points by the end of 2024. Thus, Powell yielded to pressure from economists and financiers, resurrecting a playbook that the Fed has followed for 50 years – and that should have remained in its vault.
The stated reason for tightening monetary policy is to “fight inflation.” But interest-rate hikes will do nothing to counteract inflation in the short run and will work against price increases in the long run only by bringing on yet another economic crash. Behind the policy is a mysterious theory linking interest rates to the money supply, and the money supply to the price level. This “monetarist” theory goes unstated these days for good reason. It was largely abandoned 40 years ago after it contributed to a financial debacle.
In the late 1970s, monetarists promised. If the Fed would focus only on controlling the supply of money. Inflation could be tamed without increasing unemployment. In 1981, Fed Chair Paul Volcker gave it a try. Short-term interest rates soared to 20%, unemployment reached 10%, and Latin America spiraled into a debt crisis that nearly took down all the large New York banks. By the end of 1982, the Fed had backed off.
The shadowboxing also ends badly. Once borrowers know that rates are going up over time, they tend to load up on cheap debt, fueling speculative booms in real assets (like land) and fake assets (like 1990s internet start-ups, 2000s subprime mortgages, and now cryptocurrencies). Meanwhile, long-term interest rates remain unmoved, so the yield curve flattens or even becomes inverted, eventually causing credit markets and the economy to fail. We now will likely see this feedback loop once again.
Of course, this time is different in one respect. For the first time in more than 40 years, prices are rising. This new phase was kicked off a year ago by a surge in world oil prices. This followed by rising used-car prices as the semiconductor supply chain snarled automobile production. Now, we are also seeing rising land prices (among other things), which feeds into (somewhat artificial) estimates of housing costs.
Since then, there has been almost no inflation to fight, owing to low global commodity prices and the rise of China. But the Fed has periodically shadowboxed with “inflation expectations” – raising rates over time to “preempt” the invisible demons, and then congratulating itself when none appeared.
Inflation rates are reported on a 12-month basis. Once any shock hits, it is guaranteed to generate headlines about “inflation” for 11 more months. A boon for the inflation hawks. But since oil prices in December were about the same as they were in July, the initial shock will be out of the data in a few months and the inflation reports will change.
True, the effect of more expensive energy will continue to percolate through the system. That’s unavoidable. Whenever there is a structural change like an increase in energy costs or a reshoring of parts of the supply chain, “inflation” is inevitable and necessary. To hold average price increases to the previous target, some other prices would have to fall, and that generally doesn’t happen. The economy always adjusts through an increase in average prices. This process continues until the adjustment is complete..
By reacting now, the Fed is saying that it would like (if it could) to force down some prices in order to offset rising energy and supply-chain costs, thereby pushing the average inflation rate back down to its 2% target as quickly as possible. Assuming the Fed understands that this is what it is doing, what prices does it have in mind? Wages, of course. What else is there?
Powell himself declared that the United States has a “tremendously strong labor market.” Citing the ratio of job openings against “quits,” he thinks there are too few workers chasing too many jobs. But why would that be? Considering that the US economy is still several million jobs below the actual employment levels of late 2019, it seems that many workers are refusing to go back to crummy jobs at lousy pay. As long as they have some reserves and can hold out for better terms, they will.
As wages rise to bring back workers, and because most jobs nowadays are in services, higher-income people (who buy more services) will have to pay more to lower-income people (who provide them). This is the essence of “inflation” in a services economy. Energy and most goods prices are set worldwide. Service wages are the only part of the price structure that the Fed’s new policy can affect directly. And the only way the policy can work – eventually – is by making working Americans desperate. Obviously, logically, inevitably, and despite all the crocodile tears about inflation harming ordinary Americans. The Fed is determined to stop rising wages.
The takeaway for American workers: The Fed is not your friend. Nor is any politician who declares – as US President Joe Biden did this month – that “inflation is the Fed’s job.” And I write that as a Democrat.
sounds like the world i live in. which makes me think two things. why is it that the science of economics can support two almost opposite “facts” about how the economy works with no way to “prove” who is right? and while I see things the way Galbraith sees them, i wish he would connect the dots in a finer weave, so I could convince myself that it’s not all just a matter of which side are you on, boys.
[i think i ageed with someone here yesterday that indeed Milton Friedman was an idiot. Now here is Galbraith saying everyone has known that for forty years, but I never heard it on the news. And, quite recently I heard that Volker ended inflation, which was not my impression at the time. btw I don’t know anything about economics. I always suspect that those who do, know something (deep things) that I do not. But I can’t see it.]
since Galbraith wrote the quoted piece federal fund rates are up 525 (?) basis points, labor is doing fairly well, and stock markets are up.
financial conditions remain fairly loose, and real estate inventories remains low.
quantitative tightening has reversed for the svb bankng plunge.
see new deal democrats bookends to this entry. gdp and personal consumption/income look pretty good to me.
I admit I was like Galbraith….
paddy
onliest thing i can say is that there sure are a lot of people living on the streets in such good times.
I am not sure what the Fed’s motive is. They may truly believe in Friedman’s (wrong) monetarist view that raising interest rates will fight inflation. But my guess is it is an attack on labor/workers.
Many working class people are also debtors: mortgages, car loans, credit cards, student loans. Labor typically achieves income gains during high inflation. Raising interest rates is a way of transferring that money back to the owners of capital in the form of higher interest payments on loans. Some debts are at fixed rates (which inflation actually benefits as they are repaid with cheaper dollars) and will be unaffected. But new loans or loans with variable interest rates will see higher repayment amounts.
Not sure which, the Fed is either dumb or cynical.
Markg
this war has been going on a long time. farmers borrow from banks to get the money to put in a crop. inflation makes the loans cheaper to repay and the banks lose money (buying power) .
this picture changes a bit in the new daze because some farmers own banks.
high interest helps lenders, hurts borrowers. the recession is just incidental..but hurts labor more than the money elite.
Fed knows this, but need not be cynical.. bcecause it’s all they know.