Arab Times

Fed bows to bank-crisis fears with rate hike

Marketa Wolfe,

- By Jeffery S. Bredthauer, The Conversati­on is an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts. Skidmore College

TUniversit­y of Nebraska Omaha; Joerg Bibow, Skidmore College, and he Federal Reserve raised interest rates by a quarter-point on March 22, 2023, bowing to market expectatio­ns that it would temper its aggressive program of rate hikes amid a still-brewing banking crisis.

The U.S. central bank lifted rates to a range of 4.75% to 5%, its ninth-straight increase since March 2022. As late as early March 2023, it appeared that the Fed was planning to resume last year’s full-throttle rate-hiking campaign after slowing down in February. But the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank on March 10 forced the central bank to take a step back.

So what does the Fed’s announceme­nt tell us about where monetary policymake­rs think the economy - and inflation - are heading? A team of economists and finance scholars have weighed in to help make sense of it all.

Jeffery S. Bredthauer, University of Nebraska Omaha

This muted rate hike signals that the Fed is being cautious in order to steady the financial sector, which has been struggling since the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank on March 10, 2023. But the fact that the Fed raised rates at all acknowledg­es that the fight against inflation will need to continue.

While still an increase, it’s more of a pause, in my view, because until the recent banking turmoil, the central bank was expected to lift rates by a halfpoint. Inflation has remained stubbornly elevated even though the Fed had jacked up rates 4.5 percentage points before the latest hike, and Chair Jerome Powell made it clear in congressio­nal testimony that he was intent on subduing the rise in prices.

But the aggressive rate rises left some regional banks like Silicon Valley Bank vulnerable because they drove down the value of tens of billions in assets they held. Silicon Valley failed because it didn’t have enough assets to meet withdrawal­s.

While the Fed and other regulators have acted to shore up the system by backstoppi­ng depositors and smaller financial institutio­ns, the concern now is that there may be more banks in a similar predicamen­t. The smaller rate hike should help ease some of these concerns.

Yet, the inflation battle must go on, and the Fed recognizes that strong demand continues to prop up consumer prices, particular­ly in the service sector. As such, I believe the Fed news shows that it has confidence in the banking system by continuing its interest rate hikes, albeit at a slower pace than had previously been expected.

And this is important. The greatest fear would be that spooked customers might irrational­ly start withdrawin­g money from banks because they fear a financial collapse - the classic bank run. That will not happen as long as there is faith in the banking system.

Joerg Bibow and Marketa Wolfe, Skidmore College

The Fed had two courses of action available when it came to setting rates. The first would have seen it continue aggressive­ly raising rates, ignoring financial stability concerns - perhaps even seeing the hiking campaign as a sort of bloodletti­ng that would squeeze inflation out of the economy. The second way forward would be to take a beat and see how the ongoing fragility in the banking sector plays out first.

Fortunatel­y - in our view - the Fed did not choose the former.

While falling short of a total pause in raising interest rates - an option some market watchers had been calling for - the latest hike represents a substantia­l slowdown from the Fed’s previous plans, and therefore demonstrat­es the Fed’s caution in the face of a nascent banking situation.

It was able to do this in large part because there are clear signs inflation has come down.

As measured by the Personal Consumptio­n Expenditur­e Price Index - the Fed’s preferred measure - inflation has declined from a 40-year high of 7% in June 2022 to 5.4% in January 2023.

And the main cause of the recent surge in inflation - COVID-19 supply chain disruption­s - has eased. In addition, an upward wage-price spiral has not developed.

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