Earlier this year, the idea of the Fed raising rates by three-quarters of percentage point wasn't on the menu. But in just a few months, that sizable jump has become the norm, and almost certainly sealed Jay Powell's status as the Paul Volcker of the 2020s.
Here's the deal: The Federal Reserve made history today, approving its third consecutive 75-basis-point interest rate hike. Once again, the Fed is trying to wring inflation out of the economy by using the most powerful and broad lever it has — controlling how much it costs for businesses and people to borrow money.
The benchmark lending rate is now the highest it has been since the global financial crisis of 2008, my colleague Nicole Goodkind reports.
So, here's what you need to know:
- The 75-basis-point move was widely expected.
- But markets slumped anyway because of a shift in the so-called dot plot, which indicated that the next two Fed meetings will include yet another 75-point hike and then a 50-point hike. That's 25 basis points more than Wall Street was counting on, and investors are a delicate bunch who tend to have a conniption when caught off guard.
- All three major US equities indexes slipped right after the Fed announcement. (Then attempted a rally. Then fell again. It was a wild afternoon.)
- What's it all mean for us regular people? Sorry to say, but the "pain" the Fed chief keeps warning about is mostly pain for lower and middle class people, who are more likely to be laid off, see their hours or wages cut, and have trouble paying credit card debt as rates go up. Mortgage rates, which are already more than double where they were a year ago, will also keep going up.
One of Powell's biggest critics, Senator Elizabeth Warren, was quick to fire off a tweet decrying the "extreme" hike, which the Fed itself expects will push unemployment up to 4.4% from 3.7% currently — amounting to more than 1 million jobs.
"Chair Powell just announced another extreme interest rate hike while forecasting higher unemployment," Warren tweeted. "I've been warning that Chair Powell's Fed would throw millions of Americans out of work — and I fear he's already on the path to doing so."
Powell doesn't like to say words like "layoff" or "job cuts." But he's not unsympathetic to what he euphemistically calls "softening of labor market conditions." He just thinks that the short-term pain of a recession would be preferable to the longer-term pain of entrenched inflation.
To set the labor market up for sustained strength, he said, we have got to get inflation behind us. "I wish there were a painless way to do that. There isn't."
STEP BACK
To understand the Fed, it helps to understand Powell.
In his role as the central bank chief, he's made no secret of his admiration for Paul Volcker, whose name is practically synonymous with fighting inflation at all costs, even if it crashes the economy into a recession. That's exactly what Volcker's Fed did — twice — in the early 1980s.
During congressional testimony in the spring, Powell described Volcker as a hero, calling him "the greatest economic public servant of the era."
(Fun fact: The 6-foot-7 Volcker was also known in DC by his nickname, "Tall Paul")
At least twice in the past month, Powell has publicly invoked the title of Volcker's 2018 biography "Keeping At It." In his now notoriously blunt Jackson Hole speech last month, he declared that "we must keep at it until the job is done." And again Wednesday: "We want to act aggressively now and ... keep at it until it's done."
Part of the reason Volcker is remembered so favorably by Powell and others is that it required a savvy mind and an iron stomach to a) understand the problem of rampant inflation, and b) implement the painful shock therapy of interest rate hikes that cost millions of people their jobs. Volcker's plan worked, but it really sucked for a while. There was indeed some pain, to borrow Powell's phrasing.
Inflation is now the highest it's been since Volcker ran the Fed, and the central bank itself is facing a crisis of credibility after not moving fast enough to keep rising prices in check.
Credibility was a big concern for Volcker as well.
"Volcker's mantra, one he told me again and again through 2008-9, was that in a crisis the only asset you have is your credibility," Austan Goolsbee, an economist who advised the Obama administration, wrote in 2019 just after Volcker died at age 92.
Bottom line: Powell continues to draw from the Volcker playbook, which means he's unlikely to waver on the Fed's target rate of 2% inflation, lest the central bank's credibility take another blow. Only time will tell whether that 40-plus-year-old playbook still applies in an economy that's fundamentally different from the one Volcker confronted.
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