Opinion:
The Fed is heading for another catastrophe
By Stephen S.
Roach, Published: Dec 24, 2014 9:15 a.m.
ET
With so much dry kindling, it will not take much to spark the next
conflagration
NEW HAVEN, Conn. (Project Syndicate)
– America’s Federal Reserve is headed down a familiar — and highly dangerous —
path. Steeped in denial of its past mistakes, the Fed is pursuing the same
incremental approach that helped set the stage for the financial crisis of
2008-2009. The consequences could be similarly catastrophic.
Consider the December meeting of the Federal Open Market
Committee, where discussions of raising the benchmark federal funds rate were
couched in adjectives, rather than explicit actions.
In line with prior forward guidance that the
policy rate would be kept near zero for a “considerable” amount of time after
the Fed stopped purchasing long-term assets in October, the FOMC declared that it can now
afford to be “patient” in waiting for the right conditions to raise the rate.
Add to that Fed Chair Janet
Yellen’s declaration that
at least a couple more FOMC meetings would need to take place before any such
“lift-off” occurs, and the Fed seems to be telegraphing a protracted journey on
the road to policy normalization.
With so much dry kindling, it will not take much to spark the next
conflagration
This bears an eerie resemblance to
the script of 2004-2006, when the Fed’s incremental approach led to the
near-fatal mistake of condoning mounting excesses in financial markets and the
real economy. After pushing the federal funds rate to a 45-year low of 1%
following the collapse of the equity bubble of the early 2000s, the Fed delayed
policy normalization for an inordinately long period. And when it finally began
to raise the benchmark rate, it did so excruciatingly slowly.
In the 24 months from June 2004, the
FOMC raised the federal funds rate from 1% to 5.25% in 17 increments of 25
basis points each. Meanwhile, housing and credit bubbles were rapidly
expanding, fueling excessive household consumption, a sharp drop in personal
savings, and a record current-account deficit — imbalances that set the stage
for the meltdown that was soon to follow.
The Fed, of course, has absolved
itself of any blame in setting up the U.S. and the global economy for the Great
Crisis. It was not monetary policy’s fault, argued both former Fed Chairmen
Alan Greenspan and Ben Bernanke; if anything, they insisted, a lack of
regulatory oversight was the culprit.
This argument has proved convincing
in policy and political circles, leading officials to focus on a new approach
centered on so-called macro-prudential tools, including capital requirements
and leverage ratios, to curb excessive risk-taking by banks. While this
approach has some merit, it is incomplete, as it fails to address the egregious
mispricing of risk brought about by an overly accommodative monetary policy and
the historically low interest rates that it generated.
In this sense, the Fed’s
incrementalism of 2004-2006 was a policy blunder of epic proportions.
What do independent central banks stand for if they
are not prepared to face up to the markets and make the tough and disciplined
choices that responsible economic stewardship demands?
The Fed seems poised to make a
similar — and possibly even more serious — misstep in the current environment.
For starters, given ongoing concerns about post-crisis vulnerabilities and
deflation risk, today’s Fed seems likely to find any excuse to prolong its
incremental normalization, taking a slower pace than it adopted a decade ago.
More important, the Fed’s $4.5 trillion balance sheet has since grown more than fivefold. Though the Fed has
stopped purchasing new assets, it has shown no inclination to scale back its
outsize holdings. Meanwhile it has passed the quantitative-easing baton to the
Bank of Japan and the European Central Bank, both of which will create even
more liquidity at a time of record-low interest rates.
In these days of froth, the
persistence of extraordinary policy accommodation in a financial system flooded
with liquidity poses a great danger. Indeed, that could well be the lesson of
recent equity- and currency-market volatility and, of course, plummeting oil
prices.
With so much dry kindling, it will not take much to spark
the next conflagration.
Source:http://www.marketwatch.com/story/the-fed-is-heading-for-another-catastrophe-2014-12-23?siteid=yhoof2ave
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