Posted on 03/20/2014 6:45:59 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
The spring of 2014 has not yet begun, but a jittery Wall Street was spooked Wednesday by the prospect that interest rates might rise as soon as the spring of 2015.
That was the immediate response to Federal Reserve chairwoman Janet Yellens first press conference since taking office. Yellens mere suggestion that the Fed might someday pursue a less inflationary policy has been blamed for a drop in the Dow Jones Industrial Average, and armchair central bankers are jumping on the rookie Fed chief for talking the market down.
Fed may raise rates as soon as next spring, Yellen suggests: The Federal Reserve will probably end its massive http://t.co/Vz66rejrLN TAX DEADBEATS (@taxdeadbeats) March 19, 2014
Fed watchers were quick to blame Yellens rambling responses for the fall, which took the Dow from a high of 16,363.32 down to 16,126.29 a decline of less than 2 percent but nevertheless enough to create a furious response from observers who fear a world without perpetual public support for Wall Street. The Dow reinflated late in the day to close at 16,222.17.
Yellen Send Stocks Tumbling After First Fed Meeting http://t.co/3f93EbgR5m RealClear.com (@RealClearUpdate) March 19, 2014
Yellen critics differed on what she did wrong, however. BusinessWeeks Peter Coy charged her with committing the rookie mistake of speaking too clearly. TheStreet.coms Richard Gobel, on the other hand, said the Fed chairwoman is confusing us all. MarketWatchs Rex Nutting split the difference by pointing out that while Yellen spoke for an hour, the market only heard three words: around six months.
Yellen was referring to her vague ambition to wind down both the Feds quantitative-easing program, which has quadrupled the U.S. monetary base since 2007, and ease up on its unprecedented suppression of interest rates. The QE taper could begin this fall, Yellen hinted, and interest-rate hikes half a year after that. Both goals were speculated about for years by Yellens predecessor, Ben Bernanke, using much the same language Yellen used Wednesday, but nothing has ever come of it. The Feds accommodationist policies have succeeded in reinflating the real-estate and stock markets both of which remained overvalued by historical standards even at the depth of the recession but it has done little to spur economic growth as measured by new-business formation, job creation, or other measures.
Yellen is fortunate that few observers grasp the falsehood at the center of the Feds dual mandate of managing inflation and maximizing employment. This mandate is based on an antique economic theory called the Phillips Curve, which posited an inverse relationship between inflation and unemployment.
The Phillips Curve, a relic of Keynesian mythology, has been abandoned by economists after repeatedly failing to bear out in reality most notably during the stagflation of the 1970s and the unprecedented economic stagnation of the past eight years. Since 2006, Bernanke has quadrupled the monetary base, and inflation which is widely described as being under control or even too low has in fact robbed the dollar of 16 percent of its value, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics inflation calculator. Yet the economy has moved sideways, unemployment remains at 6.7 percent, and household net worth is about where it was prior to the recession amounting to a massive disappearance of buying power with no discernible positive effects on the economy.
Yellen was a popular choice for Fed chief because she is especially committed to these catastrophic policies. Nevertheless, quantitative-easing fatigue and growing unease at interest rates that are in no way reflective of earthly reality have given rise to speculation that even Yellen may have to become less aggressive in devaluing the dollar. Wednesdays comments amounted to a mush-mouthed acknowledgment of these concerns, but Yellens desire to punt on the hard choices was applauded by inflation believers. Jared Bernstein, whose disastrous tenure as Vice President Joe Bidens economic adviser gave rise to the infamous phrase recovery summer, rejoiced that inflation hawks who are always and everywhere in eclipse were, once again, in eclipse.
Fed hawks to put away the fire hose says Jared Bernstein http://t.co/WvWkL0LAPJ @EconJared @aarontask Yahoo Finance (@YahooFinance) March 19, 2014
Others were less enchanted. The Wall Street Journals Real Time Economics blog gave ironical treatment to Yellens claim that cold winter weather was an important factor in holding back the economy. In ValueWalk.coms assessment of the Federal Open Market Committees statement, David Merkel observed, You almost never see anyone claim good weather boosted results.
Six months means I have no idea. Readers react to Yellen comment: http://t.co/1JnGZIbGlj MarketWatch (@MarketWatch) March 19, 2014
The most significant move of the day, and the best hint as to Yellens plans, was the FOMCs decision to abandon its 6.5 percent unemployment threshold, which the Fed indicated in 2012 would be the trigger to begin the taper. By removing this discipline, Yellen is free to continue robbing the dollar of its purchasing power.
Also undiscussed by Yellen and nearly all her critics was the horrible effect of monetary accommodation on Americans who work for a living. As noted above, you would need to be earning at least 16 percent more greenbacks than you were in 2006 to keep up with inflation. This is not true for the vast majority of Americans. By taking the Census Bureaus Household Income data for 2012 (the most recent year available) and using the BLS inflation calculator to reverse-inflate those numbers back to 2006 levels, we can see that across all income levels, Americans are doing worse. The bottom-quintile income of $20,599, for example, comes to $18,087.40 in 2006 dollars. A fourth-quintile income of $104,096 comes to only $91,403.75 in 2006 dollars. Across all income levels, the reverse-adjusted 2012 levels are lower than the adjusted 2006 income levels the Census Bureau lists.
Although monetarists maintain that inflation is a key component of modern economics, it has in fact been understood, and loathed, for centuries. In The Wealth of Nations, economist Adam Smith discusses inflation at length always describing it as debauchment of the currency that enriches the king at the expense of his subjects. Then-presidential candidate Ronald Reagan made a similar point in a 1980 debate with President Jimmy Carter.
Rather than refuting this obvious point, monetarists rely on hectoring propaganda, such as this short film from the Depression era:
Yellen believes that inflation is too low, a faith in which she receives eager support from the media. But the belief that managed inflation can bring economic benefits or even that inflation is a natural rather than monetary phenomenon is the real source of the kind of troubles Yellen has already begun to manifest in her first big public appearance.
Devaluing the currency is not just an activity without any end point but one without any purpose. In the century-plus history of the Federal Reserve, the dollar has lost more than 95 percent of its value, and a simple comparison with pre-Fed history indicates that this devaluation brought no economic benefits that would not have come about anyway. In the hundred years prior to the Feds creation, the United States expanded from a handful of states on the Eastern seaboard to a continent-spanning nation, acquired both Alaska and Hawaii, abolished slavery, built the transcontinental railroad, became an unprecedented world power, and experienced levels of economic growth and social mobility that it has never again matched all of those achievements having been accompanied by steady deflation that left the dollar worth more in 1913 than it had been in 1813.
Yellens problem isnt that she couldnt make the markets see her point. Its that she cant see whats right in front of her nose.
Tim Cavanaugh is news editor of National Review Online.
The elite just can’t handle it if the little folk who try to get ahead will get some interest on their savings, can they?
Raising rates, or stopping the inflation of the stock market,
will reveal the true state of the economy.
They need to have a Republican president before they can let the veil slip.
You watch, they’ll do it that way, in order to blame the Republican president for the economic crash to follow.
I’m going to (verbally) punch any and all leftists in the nose that do so.
Is Yellen stupid, or does she just sound that way? I think Senator Susan Collins of Maine talks like that, too.
RE: Is Yellen stupid, or does she just sound that way? I think Senator Susan Collins of Maine talks like that, too.
I don’t know, but our monetary policy for the past 5 years as all been HER idea ( with Bernanke’s approval of course ).
Obama might have spent to the point of no return...
Indeed. I can remember when a citizen could buy a $1,000 Treasury Bond. The banks didn't like that and pressured the Congress to make the minimum purchase $10,000. Thankfully, we still had a trace of the free enterprise system left at that time and the Mutual Fund industry came out with an end run around that scheme by introducing Money Market Funds.
“I dont know, but our monetary policy for the past 5 years as all been HER idea ( with Bernankes approval of course ).”
that confirms it. She’s stupid.
Like Glen Beck was saying this morning - the idea of printing money to better the economy is like Heroin, addictive. And the market is like the junkie “What!!?? You can’t take away my heroin! Aaaagggghhhh!”
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