The Fed must resist repeating past mistakes
Markets have been trained to expect lower rates at the first sign of volatility. Powell mustn’t give in to temptation.
IT’S easy to think that the Jerome Powell-led Federal Reserve has been one of the unluckiest on record. From the 2020 pandemic and its messy aftermath to the current tariff-induced economic and financial volatility, it has faced one big external shock after the other. Powell has had repeated run-ins with US President Donald Trump, lost key officials over insider trading allegations, seen the institution’s credibility eroded by the misguided 2021 transitory inflation judgment, and more.
Yet what has made this bad luck worse and more consequential for overall economic well-being is that it has interacted with self-created weaknesses. Unlike other Feds, those have extended to analysis, forecasts, communication, and policy responses, repeated missteps that were aggravated by a distinct lack of humility and learning.
The result is a Fed whose political independence and market credibility are as shaky as they have been since the late 1970s and early 1980s. And that is bad news for a central bank that, in the next few months, will face difficult policy judgments. It’s also bad news for the world’s largest economy that has lost other anchors and is suffering its own period of instability at the centre of the global economic and financial order.
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