Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

ABOUT SLOWING RATE HIKES

- New York Daily News Editorial Board

Economies are not known for being simple things to untangle. Unlike in the physical sciences, where if you do enough calculatio­ns, you can shoot a projectile into an asteroid moving at an incredible speed 7 million miles away, the so-called laws of money deal with the hazier and less predictabl­e forces of group psychology and consumptio­n.

That’s why reasonable people can disagree on the proper solutions for runaway inflation that has been hammering U.S. families and eroding away wage gains. …

Yet as the Fed has moved aggressive­ly ahead with more dramatic rate hikes than we’ve seen in decades — bringing the cost of borrowing to levels that remain historical­ly on the low end — many, including this board, have urged a measured approach that’s less likely to result in a recession that could do more long-term damage than inflation that might already be on the road to cooling off.

… Fed Chair Jay Powell rightly acknowledg­ed that there are lags between the measures enacted so far and their impact, indicating that he may tap the brakes on his brake-tapping strategy and respond to changing circumstan­ces, minimizing future hikes. Good. Even as Powell insists that a stumbling economy can easily be addressed with a new injection of cash, we know from experience that recessions have a way of getting out of hand.

Powell and the other Fed governors should also meaningful­ly engage with the fact, as pointed out by the likes of the chief economist at UBS Global Wealth Management, hardly a left-wing ideologue, that soaring prices are being driven in part by corporate profiteeri­ng using natural inflation as cover. No amount of tightening demand can fix that.

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