The 'Experts' Were Never Going To Fix Inflation
The idea that the Fed has the knowledge necessary to control the economy with perfectly calibrated policies was always an illusion.

Debate now rages about whether the Federal Reserve should continue to raise interest rates to tame inflation or slow down these hikes and see what happens. This is not the first debate we've had recently about inflation and Fed actions. The lesson we should learn, and I fear we won't, is that government officials and those advising them from inside or outside the government don't know as much as they claim to about the interventions they design to control the economy.
As a reminder, in 2021, the dominant voices including Fed Chairman Jerome Powell asserted that the emerging inflation would be "transitory" and disappear when pandemic-induced supply constraints dissolve. That was wrong. When this fact became obvious, the messaging shifted: Fed officials could and would fight inflation in a timely manner by raising rates to the exact level needed to avoid recession and higher unemployment. Never mind that the whole point of raising interest rates is precisely to soak money out of the economy by slowing demand, which often causes unemployment to rise.
Lessons from the past should have made everyone more suspicious of this "soft landing" argument. According to economist Lawrence Summers, "over the past 75 years, every time inflation has exceeded 4 percent and unemployment has been below 5 percent, the U.S. economy has gone into recession within two years. Today, inflation is north of 6 percent and unemployment is south of 4 percent." Since then, he has predicted that unemployment rate would have to go up to the 6 percent range to achieve some significant inflation reduction.
That bring us to the current day. The Fed has increased rates several times. Public and private borrowing costs are up, the market is unsettled, and yet underlying inflation is worse while employment remains strong. This intensifying pain is leading some commentators and politicians to urge the Fed to stop tightening until we know if the previous hikes have worked or not. The lag between Fed actions and visible impact, they say, could be years and we don't want the Fed to tighten things too much.
As someone who never had faith that the same central bankers who created and missed the biggest inflation in 40 years could guide our complex economy back to health with only the crude tools at their disposal—asset tapering, interest rate hikes, and backward-looking models—I'm baffled by the debate. We were told for years that the mighty Fed had not only conquered inflation but could now use its powers to produce inclusive economic growth, control the climate, and reduce inequality.
Where did the confidence go? In truth, the idea that the Fed (or anyone) possesses the knowledge necessary to fix, control, or grow the economy with perfectly calibrated top-down policies was always an illusion. That bubble just burst.
Indeed, inflation control was always going to be messy, painful, and politically risky. While the risk of overshooting is real, the much bigger risk is that Fed officials will cave to political pressure and loosen monetary policy too soon, thus causing inflation expectations to shoot up and inflation itself to follow. If this happens, the cost of permanently eliminating the problem would only rise.
Over at Discourse magazine, my colleague Thomas Hoenig—a former president of the Fed's Kansas City branch—explains how Fed officials faced similar pressures during the late 1960s and 1970s. Unfortunately, he writes, "Bowing to congressional and White House pressure, [Fed officials] held interest rates at an artificially low level….What followed was a persistent period of steadily higher inflation, from 4.5% in 1971 to 14% by 1980. Only then did the [Federal Reserve Open Market Committee], under the leadership of Paul Volcker, fully address inflation."
Often overlooked is Volcker's accomplishment: the willingness to stay the course despite a painful recession. Indeed, it took about three years from when he pushed interest rates up to about 20 percent in 1979 for the rate of inflation to fall to a manageable level. As such, Hoenig urges the Fed to stay strong today. He writes, "Interest rates must rise; the economy must slow, and unemployment must increase to regain control of inflation and return it to the Fed's 2% target." There is a cost in doing this; a soft landing was never in the cards.
After this string of failed predictions, slow response, and admitted ignorance, will politicians finally learn what F.A. Hayek meant about "how little they really know about what they imagine they can design?"
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They always overshoot and undershoot, and never remember they do it.
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Every sane and non-partisan American knows that the best fix for the economy is to allow free market competition, lower taxes, and for government to get the hell out of the way involving education, skills, and controlling businesses through too many regulations. All they do is seek control, so they use race, ethnicity, sex, etc., to get clueless Americans thinking that business owners are bad and government, who will 'lift you up,' is good. The problem is, somebody has to work for government to tax. The government cannot make people rich. They produce nothing!
That's silly. There are a large number of millionaires and billionaires that got rich suckling at the government teat. Have you never heard of defense contracting?
And subsidies... Green, agricultural, energy, banking, etc.
Who are you to be questioning the experts!?
— Lefty Jeffy
I’m always holding out hope that his next industrial sized barrel of Ben & Jerry’s will be his last.
https://nypost.com/2022/10/26/4-teens-killed-in-buffalo-crash-while-attempting-tiktok-kia-challenge/
The four teenagers killed in a Buffalo car crash while attempting a TikTok challenge encouraging car theft have been identified — with a young mom among the victims.
Marcus Webster, 19, Swazine Swindle, 17, Kevin Payne, 16, and Ahjanae Harper, 14, were killed when the stolen Kia they were riding in crashed Monday morning, ejecting them and one other passenger, WGRZ reporter Claudine Ewing confirmed Tuesday.
...
In a video shared on Twitter, a local says Harper had recently welcomed a baby girl.
"She was a young mother,” the man remembers. “She definitely spent a lot of time with her daughter.”
Harper was set to celebrated her 15th birthday on Nov. 1. Her family launched a $15,000 GoFundMe in her honor on Tuesday.
Swindle’s sister, Nashira Anderson, told WIBV that the teen enjoyed playing basketball and was known for his goofy personality.
...
The driver of the Kia, which was reported stolen Sunday night, has since been charged with unauthorized use of a vehicle and criminal possession of the stolen property. He is due back in court in November.
The teens are believed to have wrecked the car while trying to complete the “Kia challenge,” a TikTok trend that shows viewers how to hot-wire Kias and Hyundais.
Her family launched a $15,000 GoFundMe in her honor on Tuesday.
Jeez. So, uh, at what exact dollar amount does starting a GoFundMe become an insult?
So Harper had a kid at 14, and stole a car before she was 15. While it is a tragedy, I guess a Darwin award can't be awarded for this.
Darwin awards can be awarded to people who already have kids, because they can have no more kids afterward.
Having said that, I have always been a little skeptical of giving out Darwin awards to people who do stupid things, because we all have the capacity to do stupid things, and I doubt there's a gene that prevents us from doing them. Indeed, some of our genes -- the ones that encourage social cohesion, for example -- might even be needed for our survival, with the nasty side effect of occasionally making stupidity contagious.
Now, having said that, ideas have lives (and even evolution) of their own, and I can't help but wonder if a Darwin award could be granted for efforts ta show that a particular idea is stupid, and shouldn't be passed on to other people ....
Look at this chart of inflation from 1800 to 2005.
Basically ZERO inflation from 1800 to 1915, other than inflation during war and deflation afterwards.
The Fed was created in 1913. WW I started in 1914 in Europe, 1917 in America. Inflation rose as it always does during war. It tried to drop after the war, but the Fed intervened and fucked it up, causing the 1919-1920 recession which started as bad as the 1929 recession, but luckily, Woodrow Wilson had his stroke and was out of it worse than Biden, so bad that his wife and all his advisors were paralyzed with fear, did nothing more to the economy, and it recovered on its own for the Roaring 20s, until the next government fuckup in 1929.
The other disaster in 1913 was the beginning of the income tax, which freed government from the restraints of depending on booze taxes and tariffs, allowed backing loans to Britain, and allowed the military buildup to intervene in the European war, which would have turned into a repeat of the 1870 Franco-Prussian war otherwise.
It’s real simple: get rid of the Fed, get their grubby hands off the money supply, return to whatever gold standard was in effect then. That worked for 115 years. It hasn’t worked in the 107 years since.
Fuck the Fed.
Excellent post and point.
de Rugy: “The lesson we should learn, and I fear we won’t, is that government officials and those advising them from inside or outside the government don’t know as much as they claim to about the interventions they design to control the economy.”
I’m afraid Veronique is missing the greater lesson: the government shouldn’t be involved in managing the economy or commerce (an offense to our freedoms), the Fed and income tax are further offenses to our freedoms, and we should return to a gold standard and free markets (including in money) so the government can’t counterfeit to spend, putting a burden upon the people and hurting them in the process (for the benefit of politicians) who spend the money, almost always from rent-seeking people who’ll buy favors from politicians, that shouldn’t be sold.
The lesson isn't they don't know what they're talking about (which is partly true, because they usually know they're lying), it's that government shouldn't be meddling with free markets.
Warren Buffetts deserves blame. His entire life MO was “The U.S. is a special place, we can just print money”.
When were markets free?
In the USA, most markets were free from 1783 to 1916.
The greater lesson is that this is all intentional, and consequences be damned, or even welcomed. How many times since the 1970s have we heard the Malthusian cries for low economic growth, zero population growth, imminent environmental and energy crises... The end is near. And how many times have we heard the misguided revolutionaries' calls to "Burn it all down!" That's exactly what's happening today. Our technocratic elites tell us we must slow economic growth for the good of the planet, while our leaders use the opportunity to line their pocket and lock in their wealth and power. A billionaire doesn't care too much if inflation erodes his wealth by a couple hundred million: he's still filthy rich. On the other hand, the guy with $100K in life savings just saw his retirement plans dashed... unless of course he has a taxpayer-backed municipal pension with full COLA, in which case he's A-OK. These policies are not due to ignorance; they are intentional.
it recovered on its own for the Roaring 20s
Calvin Coolidge don’t get no respect. One of our better, most libertarian Presidents, ignored right here on Reason.
The economy recovered before Coolidge became President.
Coolidge was smart enough not to tinker with things.
He was a pragmatic man. Like, chopping wood to keep warm is important, tinkering with economic mumbo jumbo not so much pragmatic. When he went on summer break you weren't supposed to bring him work during non work hours unless it was an emergency. Like a war starting emergency.
I'd take a "If it ain't broke don't fix it" government right now in a heartbeat.
2nd that.
"it recovered on its own for the Roaring 20s, until the next government fuckup in 1929."
I will quibble with you here. It cannot be overstated how much governments fucked us during this time period.
The "Roaring 20s" were partially due to all that free money being pumped into the economy at the end of WW1.
At the end of WW1, the world was off the gold standard (because government needed to expand money supplies faster than gold in order to fund their wars). There was a glut of paper currency in circulation, and not enough gold to back it. Rather than remove the currency from circulation, which would cause a deflationary contraction, or debase their money (saying a Pound was no longer good for a Pound of sterling), they chose to create a system of monetary governance where they PRETENDED that cash was backed by gold.
In the brief monetary regime, all the governments promised to give gold to the Bank of England, who would then use Fractional Reserve Central Banking. The US, France, Belgium- other countries- would all settle global accounts with IOUs issued by Great Britain's central bank. This is similar to fractional reserve banking- where a bank hold's a fraction of its total liabilities in reserve cash, lending out the rest. The leverage that this creates- taking cash that would otherwise be idle, and instead letting it be useful- is generally a good thing. But in this new money regime, it was adding leverage ON TOP of leverage. The Bank of England had so much gold, which was a fractional reserve of what was loaned out to other nations' central banks, who then loaned out to Banks who were practicing fractional reserves. It was a house of cards built upon leverage of leveraged leverages.
In the US and France, there were major problems. In the US, our banking system was deeply fragmented due to protectionist laws. Your local bank was prohibited from expanding into other regions. As a result, when a drought wiped out the crop in that region, the bank went out of business instead of relying on diverse finances in other regions. France was dealing with the turmoil of reconstruction.
In order to deal with their problems, the US and France started hoarding gold because creditors wanted hard currency to back these recovery efforts. That hoarding of gold meant that the Bank of England could not settle accounts- they essentially could not get enough gold to back their IOUs, and there was a run on the bank and they were wiped out.
All of this- from the wars that fucked France, to the banking regs that fucked the US, to the world money regime that fucked Britain and the rest of the global economy, was all caused by governments. The roaring 20s were merely the Boom that comes when governments delude themselves into thinking they've "Fixed" their problems (monetary expansion during the war).
Technically true, but not just for your details; the government had been meddling in the economy since the beginning, so saying the economy recovered on its own could never be true. My main point was that once Wilson and his retinue stopped meddling because of his stroke, the economy did right itself. If they had continued meddling, it would have taken a lot longer, maybe like 1929 ended up.
This, all day every day.
And can't help but notice the slight upward tick after 1971 to present. Wonder what happened then...
"Look at this chart of inflation from 1800 to 2005.
Basically ZERO inflation from 1800 to 1915" - retard
Inflation/deflation is the red line at the bottom of the chart.
The black line on the graph represents the CPI, not inflation and grows explosively because interest compounds exponentially.
My goodness you are spectacularly ignorant.
Did you flunk out of grade 7 math?
My goodness, you are a fucking lefty ignoramus! Your pedantry is noted and ignored.
Your mistake is thinking the Fed exists to do good.
The experts need to stick to easy stuff, like controlling the planet's weather.
And airborne viruses.
Ah, the beauty of the internet world. Everybody's a fucking expert on every fucking thing.
The problem with your analogy is you're assuming that the economy is one big game, and not the millions of little games that it really is.
I may not be an expert on the economy, but I'm certainly an expert of software development and mathematics in ways that government officials cannot be. And I'm also more of an expert in the business I'm currently programming for than any bureaucrat can ever be.
Similarly, I have a relative who's an expert in construction. He's going be an expert in construction in ways that government experts won't be.
All this expertise adds up, and when government officials think they are experts at "interventions they design to control the economy" -- they are essentially claiming expertise in each and every one of these millions of games. Do you really think any one government official -- or even a teams of officials -- is going to match the expertise of everyone else?
And that is why government "expertise" doesn't amount to a hill of beans.
Reason's leading economics expert says inflation is a wingnut.com myth. Just something the media talks about because they're so unfair to Joe Biden.
#DefendBidenAtAllCosts
Needs moar HAPERINFLATION!
In fact he brought back that classic from #DefendBidenAtAllCosts Category B (all caps catchphrases) just yesterday.
Just something the media talks about because they’re so unfair to Joe Biden.
Who is Joe Biden?
Anyone who believes this isn't intentional hasn't paid attention to Democrat policies for the last 30 years.
Yes. Corporatons are intentially raising their prices in order to increase their profits.
LOL.
And yet somehow Corporations revenue is still but a pebble next to the mountain of Government revenue..
Their profit percentages have decreased as well. VendicarD doesn't seem to understand that.
Agreed. See my post above. These policies and outcomes are not due to economic ignorance. They are the polices and outcomes the ruling class desired.
How about a little self reflection from the crew that helped install the Dementia in Chief? The same guy who on day one started strangling the economy and adding ever more regulatory burden?
Sure, it is easy to blame the 'experts' how about you take note of all the writers here who were in favor of those people coming to power.
If you think we don't know what your spiel is then go fuck yourself.
The same guy who on day one started strangling the economy and adding ever more regulatory burden?
It’s not like he had a 50 yr. history of approving proxy wars and economic interventionalism or a publicly available platform that just anyone could search up. How were the Reason contributors to know of Joe Biden's peerless ability to fuck things up and that elections have consequences if no one told them?
Biden doesn't control the prices corporations demand for their products.
It is corporate price increases that are causing inflation.
LOL. You are a clueless nitwhit.
You don't think 50%+ taxes and dictates increase prices??
LOL. You are even a MORE clueless nitwhit.
"strangling the economy and adding ever more regulatory burden?"
You mean the strangled economy that has the lowest unemployment rate ever, and just grew 2.6 precent on an annualized basis last quarter?
LOL. Have you been a fool all your life?
And the lowest labor force participation rate ever recorded??
When your Nazi-Empire has everyone on unemployment but has it code-named 'stimulus' that's hardly a low-unemployment rate; that's just B.S. deception.
The 'Experts' Were Never Going To Fix Inflation
Wait, I'm confused. Aren't these the Adults that are Back In Charge?
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Gosh, shell oil just announced that it doubled it's profits this quarter due to it's higher oil prices.
Other free market Capitalists are doing the exact same thing.
Result = Inflation.
Thank goodness your Nazi-Fans regulated oil so much huh....
Why they practically monopolized the entire industry...
Oh yeah; that's exactly what they did.
Creating runaway inflation is all too easy. Anyone with the authority and access to the magic money creating machine can do it at pretty much anytime. Getting it back under control iagain s MUCH harder. During the last great stagflation it took years and Paul Volcker raising the prime rate to 20% to do it. And even he made the mistake of taking his foot off the gas too early at one point and then he had to punch it again.
Anyone who actually seriously believed that the Fed could fix the problem this quickly when real interest rates are still negative is so dumb I'm amazed they can breathe. We still have years of ass pain ahead of us, so you better get used to it.
Anyone could have foreseen that this was going to be the result when inflation started increasing. I recall talking with an economist who was swearing that Volker had beaten inflation and that inflation was now something that we "know how to handle". I pointed out to him that Volker didn't "handle" inflation by turning a dial, but by dropping the equivalent of an atomic bomb on the economy.
And now the U.S. economy is habituated on government borrowing and spending.
Republicans have a plan to borrow the government into oblivion so they can abolish social programs.
The plan even has a name. It is called "starve the beast".
You might want to do a little google research.
I can't believe UR so retarded you think abolishing social programs comes with government costs.
Section 2A. Monetary policy objectives
The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and the Federal Open Market Committee shall maintain long run growth of the monetary and credit aggregates commensurate with the economy's long run potential to increase production, so as to promote effectively the goals of maximum employment, stable prices, and moderate long-term interest rates.
[12 USC 225a. As added by act of November 16, 1977 (91 Stat. 1387) and amended by acts of October 27, 1978 (92 Stat. 1897); Aug. 23, 1988 (102 Stat. 1375); and Dec. 27, 2000 (114 Stat. 3028).]
It never seems to occur to anyone that maximum employment, stable prices and moderate interest rates might not be possible at the same time. The Fed always has to pick one over the others. And then people seem disappointed when they fail and start pointing fingers and blame shifting.
Actual objectives.
1) Protect banks from their own irresponsible lending.
2) Enable government to spend far more than it takes in.
ESG and fossil fuel divestment will kill us all. New British Prime Minister bans fracking first day.
I’ll never understand why energy independence is controversial, but here we are. It looks like Germany will eventually go with Russia China and fuck off with the Paris climate accords?
https://www.reuters.com/markets/deals/german-go-ahead-chinas-cosco-stake-hamburg-port-unleashes-protest-2022-10-26/
Brits should overthrow their government and execute their leaders.
Yes, Brexit was truly a thing of beauty. Sold to the British people by Conservative traitors.
Yes, VendicarD, slimy pile of lefty shit brought to us by stupidity.
Fuck off and die, asshole.
The EU has shown that they cannot be trusted. Good on the Brits to ditch them, other countries should follow suit.
Why is this still even a question? Shouldn't this be in the water is wet category by now?
The "experts" will never fix anything, much less inflation
Free market economies exhibit a property known as self organized criticality/instability.
The only way to limit the damage is through rational regulation.
Libertarians oppose Rational regulation.
Funny we didn't see any of your B.S. instability during the Industrial Revolution nor was it ever seen till your B.S. "rational regulation" started the Federal Reserve (fiat-money under gov-control).
UR so full of sh*t.
You.
Are.
Full.
Of.
Shit.
>central bankers who created and missed the biggest inflation in 40 years
I kind of wish a column inch had been spent on just how much of this "created" was due to experts. Especially these same Fed experts like Powell. Not just dramatic loosening, but also the pumping as well. The Fed balance sheet was frightening.
People always point to Volcker raising interest rates as the thing that broke the 70s inflation. It played a part, but it was not the whole story.
The Carter administration deregulated the airline industry. They deregulated the rail and trucking industries. The Reagan administration deregulated the Oil and Gas industries.
Reagan's firing of the Air Traffic controllers when they tried to strike helped to break the back of the unions. Along with the tail end of the Baby Boom generation entering the workforce, wage pressures decreased dramatically.
There was also a huge demographic shift with many young people moving from the Northeast and Midwest to the South in search of jobs.
The Carter administration deserves more credit than it gets for helping to set up an environment for things to change. And while the Reagan administration did it's part, the demographic changes were out of it's control.
The lesson should be that policy matters. Unfortunately, the Biden administration is guiding the policy in all the wrong directions. And a Republican Congress is unlikely to help much.
So we're pretty much screwed.
Remember when the people amended the Supreme Law and gave the 'Feds' authority to control the economy?
Yeah; Me neither....
F'En Nazi's(National Socialists).
The FED doesn't control the economy. If it did the economy wouldn't suffer from self-organized instability.
Setting interest rates, regulating every industry, overbearing taxation, fake fiat-currency, handouts etc, etc, etc...
Your level of ignorance has about as much boundary as the feds do. Completely limitless.
You keep talking about this "self-organized instability" as if the FED -- an organization specifically created to prevent booms and busts -- has the power to fix it -- and as if there hasn't been a business cycle, including one or two major depressions, since its inception.
Yet the one thing that is likely to prevent these cycles -- allowing interest rates to float naturally, to represent the true risk of taking out a loan -- is probably never going to be tried. Instead, whether we have a FED or not, we're going to push those interest rates down, darn it, because doing so causes an increase in business! A "boom", you might even call it! And this time, this "boom" is never going away!
But eventually the charade is exposed -- inflation pretty much ensures that projects that seemed plausible yesterday are going to go over budget today, and it's getting harder and harder to justify Yet Another Loan -- and eventually all these boondoggles are cancelled, and we get a "Bust".
And, naturally, people like you are going to lay the blame at the feet of "Free Markets", completely ignoring the role that government played in causing it. You furthermore add insult to injury, and insist that the only way to prevent this from happening again is "MOAR REGULATIONS!!!!!1111!!!!!ELEVENTY!!!11111!!"
And the cycle repeats itself. Because bureaucrats never learn.
Before we killed Keynesian economics, we all know that monetary policy cannot do the job. I made proposals for Obama back in 2009 and 2010 to prepare for this day, but he ignored me. Imagine that he ignored little old me.?!? After the destruction of Glass-Steagall and OKying of Credit Default Swaps, we rejected what was left of Keynes in favor of nonstop corruptionism -- both parties
I mean, nonstop corruptionism is bad, but Keynes never worked either.
Wow, Reason is shutting down a lot of comment sections before people can comment on them. Seems to me that is a kind of censorship too. Not everyone can set on their computer waiting for Reason to post a story. It also seems this happens the most on articles where the Reason writer gets bashed the most. Thin skin here?
Reason doesn't exist to permit you to comment.
Reason exists to deprive you of your liberty and property through the production of pro-corporate propaganda.
Sure, sure... It's those pro-corporate entities running around with GUNS (i.e. Gov-Guns) forcing everyone to buy their produce.
UR the very definition of B.S. propaganda.
All economic theory is bullshit to benefit the elite. Supply and demand hardly applies in any segment anymore.
Allegedly printing money caused inflation but the value of the dollar is at 30-40 year highs. No economic theory can explain that!
Libertarian economic theory in 1980 credited Ronald Reagan for "breaking the back of inflation" through his borrowing 3 trillion 2022 dollars.
Were the Libertarian's lying back then or are they lying now?
Leftards economic theory in 2022 was borrowing $4.8T of today dollars. Last I checked Reagan wasn't a Libertarian.
Wow, I found the libertarian section of reason.
Odd how Libertarians credited Ronald Reagan for "breaking the back of inflation" by borrowing roughly 3 trillion 2022 dollars and giving it to the most wealthy Americans and Corporations.
Were they lying then, or are they lying now?
Their "progressive" writers at reason are still lying even today and are called out on it by real libertarians. In case you weren't paying attention. But don't let that stop your B.S. propaganda campaign.
The "Experts" caused this inflation, why would they fix it?
The Fed can do it. If it doesn't know how, the Fed can easily learn how to do it. It's called Market Monetarism, as defined by Sumner, Beckworth, and others. It will have to resist political pressure, as Volcker did. Biden is so decrepit he won't be a problem. It doesn't need legislation. It needs wisdom and courage.
What droolin' Joe fucks up cannot be repaired.