5 REASONS WHY THE FED HAS FAILED BY
HELEN ANDERSON
No single quasi-private institution has
as much influence on the worldwide economy as the Fed, and as a leader can head
this institution for an indefinite term, no one man is as influential on the
markets as the Fed Chair.
The Dollar has plummeted in the currency
markets and shows few signs of recovery or even stabilization. The new style
and policies that accompanied Bernanke into office have made the Forex markets
more volatile than ever and even more difficult to predict. An examination of
what has gone awry can help Forex traders understand this new era at the Fed.
1. The Fed ignored the
signs
The Fed has stated that it will never act
as a regulator in any financial market, but it has the duty to use its
influence for reform when it sees signs of consumer exploitation. Since as
early as 2001, at least two senior officials inside the Fed urged its board to
call for tighter regulations in the housing markets, especially in abuses that
were clearly evident in the handling subprime mortgages. At
the time, the White House was singing the praises of America’s new society of
ownership, so the Fed took this cue and did nothing.
These deceptive loans were making
possible the dream of home ownership to millions of Americans, even to those
who could not come close to affording it. Now these same Americans are living
through a nightmare of foreclosure and debt, much in thanks to the Fed’s
willingness to ignore long-term repercussions and revel in immediate
accomplishments, no matter how hollow and transitory they might be.
2. The Fed did too little
too late
Other than advocating for reform, the Fed
should have fully committed to a strategy of lowering target interest rates.
Instead, Bernanke procrastinated, and when he did finally announce a cut, it
was insufficient and ineffectual, at best. On December 11th, the Fed dropped
its benchmark rate by a quarter of a percent rather than the half of a percent that
had been called for by analysts and investors. Wall Street promptly responded,
as the Dow plummeted nearly 300 points in one day.
The Fed might argue that this cut was
prudent and that a more drastic cut would have unnecessarily fueled a rise in
inflation. However, many view the Fed’s temerity in this matter as merely an
extension of its inertial proclivity towards inaction.
3. The Fed kept interest
rates too low for too long
Though this may seem to contradict the
statements above, one of the reasons that the Fed might have hesitated in
cutting rates is that they were already too low to begin with. Greenspan’s long
tenure at the Fed was defined by a tendency to aggressively cut interest rates,
which he began to do frequently in 1987 after the drastic correction in the
stock market.
This initial move helped stave off
disaster, but the further rate cuts of the late 1990s eventually led to the
dot-com bubble. Rates should have been raised again in the early 2000s; if this
had been done, the US might have avoided the furious borrowing that has led to
the current credit crunch.
4. The Fed’s view of
inflation is flawed
The Fed seems rather befuddled by this
important economic indicator. The soaring costs of food and energy are a
phenomenon is the US and worldwide, but the Fed does not take these
developments into account.
The Fed’s analysis focuses on “core
inflation,” which excludes a number of indices that it views as transitory,
including energy and food costs. “Headline inflation,” which does take these costs
into account, is favored by European economists, who view high energy prices as
a long-term trend. By choosing to disregard the rising costs of a barrel of
crude oil and a bottle of olive oil, the Fed is ignoring reality.
5. The Fed gives gold
stars to those deserving detentions
Fed policy following the recent economic
slowdown has done nothing but reward those who helped caused it. The majority
of financial stocks have suffered of late, and justifiably so. However, the Fed
seems dedicated to bailing out even the worst of the perpetrators with the
recent set of economic interventions that it has enacted.
While working to
eliminate any downturn in the market might seem feasible for short-term
success, it is a purely shortsighted endeavor that will hurt the economy in the
long run. In order for a free market to truly exist, bear markets must coexist
peacefully with bull markets. Unfortunately, the Fed has its bright orange vest
on and is going bear hunting. This is a doomed outing, and one that is going to
get us all hurt in the end.