Warsh would be wise to listen to Fed dissenters - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
FT商学院

Warsh would be wise to listen to Fed dissenters

Continuous easing amid successive supply shocks is a risky policy move that ignores the pandemic’s lessons
00:00

{"text":[[{"start":5.65,"text":"The writer previously served as vice-chair and governor of the Federal Reserve"}],[{"start":11,"text":"Before the Iran war, most Americans were finally catching a break at the petrol pump. That’s over now. Since February, petrol prices have jumped from under $3 to over $4.50 per gallon and diesel is up nearly 50 per cent to over $5.60. Farmers face fertiliser price increases of 25 to 50 per cent. The economic shockwave from the closure of the Strait of Hormuz has disrupted 20 per cent of global oil and natural gas shipments and as much as 30 per cent of fertiliser shipments. Even if the strait reopened tomorrow, it would take months for supply chains and prices to normalise."}],[{"start":51.2,"text":"This is putting the Federal Reserve in a tough spot with the highest number of dissents in over 30 years. At its recent meeting, the Fed issued the same language on interest rates it has maintained since January, when it expected to cut rates further this year. This provoked no fewer than three dissents. Cleveland Fed president Beth Hammack explained, “I see this clear easing bias as no longer appropriate given the outlook.”"}],[{"start":77.05000000000001,"text":"Maintaining this easing bias as the Iran war drags on is consistent with a “look through” approach to the oil price shock. The classic look through playbook treats the oil price rise as temporary and keeps monetary policy on its previous course as it waits for the shock to fade. In normal times, that’s reasonable. If inflation is near its 2 per cent target, and a supply shock is clearly a one-off, shortlived disruption, there’s no need to keep policy for the whole economy tighter than otherwise to fight a problem that will resolve on its own."}],[{"start":109.4,"text":"But these are not normal times. And this is not the Fed’s first rodeo. Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine sent commodity prices surging on the heels of wave after wave of Covid-era supply disruptions. Later that year, in my previous capacity as vice-chair of the Federal Reserve, I noted: “Even when each individual supply shock fades over time and behaves like a temporary shock on its own, a drawn-out sequence of adverse supply shocks . . . is likely to call for monetary policy” to be tighter than it otherwise should be."}],[{"start":144.10000000000002,"text":"That logic holds true today. The Iran war oil shock is not occurring in isolation; it is the latest in a series of self-inflicted supply disruptions that began early in 2025. US tariffs have risen fivefold, adding nearly one percentage point to inflation. An immigration policy contraction in labour supply growth has pushed monthly job creation sharply lower. Constraints have now accumulated across goods, labour and energy."}],[{"start":171.35000000000002,"text":"The cumulative damage is plain to see. In the months before the Iran war, core inflation in the US had been accelerating, with the latest reading at 3.2 per cent, while many other advanced economies had brought inflation closer to the 2 per cent target. American consumers were already squeezed by higher grocery bills driven by the tariffs, rising electricity rates, and soaring health insurance premiums."}],[{"start":197.75000000000003,"text":"The risk is not just the scale of the current shock, but the cumulative effect of the series of inflation shocks. Consumers don’t expect tariff refunds to result in lower prices. They expect higher future inflation due to the jump in petrol prices. When people expect inflation to persist, it tends to change pricing behaviour by businesses, and a temporary shock becomes a persistent one."}],[{"start":223.50000000000003,"text":"The post-Covid inflation lesson that the Fed learned painfully and late is that a sequence of supply shocks, each one seemingly transitory on its own, can compound into persistently higher inflation when demand outstrips constrained supply. Last year, Fed officials argued they could safely look through the tariff-driven inflation and continue cutting rates. Maintaining an easing bias today is much riskier, with the energy price shock landing on top of the earlier tariff shock amid stubbornly high inflation. The incoming chair would be wise to consider carefully the hard-won lessons reflected in the recent dissents."}],[{"start":268.3,"text":""}]],"url":"https://audio.ftcn.net.cn/album/a_1778137232_3112.mp3"}

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

SpaceX的暴涨与暴跌没有什么特别之处

麦克法登:SpaceX可能是个大家伙,其IPO规模创下历史纪录。但它基本上没有脱离一只新股的常规脚本。

特朗普将会见美国防务企业 弹药生产面临多重困境

特朗普政府希望重建常规武器库存,同时调整战备生产体系以适应现代战争。

Lex专栏:陷入困境的欧洲车企有选择,但都不怎么好

与中国结成联盟将帮助这个陷入困境的行业甩掉部分膨胀的成本。在一系列糟糕的选项中,这或许是最好的一个。

SpaceX在债市试验其打破常规的力量

三大评级机构认为SpaceX的诸多特立独行之处足以促使它们重新审视以往坚持的规范。

礼来豪掷减肥药重金,为科学家打造医药版“应用商店”

礼来正与小型生物技术公司合作,把AI作为药物发现工具。

Lex专栏:盖帝图像实力演绎被OpenAI抢镜也是门生意

这家老牌图片社此前曾为捍卫版权拼尽全力,如今决定换个新活法。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×