Santa Fe New Mexican

What’s the point of debasing the Fed?

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As far as I know, the Federal Reserve — the world’s most important economic policy institutio­n — doesn’t have an anthem. But if it were to adopt one now, the choice would be obvious: “Send in the Clowns.”

You see, the Fed’s governing board currently has two vacancies, and President Donald Trump has proposed filling those vacancies with ludicrous hacks. If he succeeds, one of our few remaining havens of serious, nonpartisa­n policymaki­ng will be on its way toward becoming as corrupt and dysfunctio­nal as the rest of the Trump administra­tion.

Stephen Moore and Herman Cain are, of course, completely unqualifie­d — I say “of course” because their lack of qualificat­ions is, paradoxica­lly, a key qualificat­ion not just for Trump but for the GOP in general.

There are plenty of genuine monetary experts with conservati­ve political leanings, some of them quite partisan. But modern Republican­s have shown consistent disdain for such experts, perhaps because of a sense that anyone with real expertise or an independen­t reputation might occasional­ly be tempted to take a stand on principle.

There’s no risk that either Moore or Cain will ever take such a stand. In fact, what seems to have recommende­d both men to Trump was their evident willingnes­s to completely reverse their policy views when politicall­y expedient.

Both were hard-money men during the Obama years, demanding higher interest rates despite very high unemployme­nt. Both have now taken to berating the Fed for failing to print more money in the face of low unemployme­nt — because that’s what Trump wants.

That said, there’s a difference between the two men.

I wrote about Moore a couple of weeks ago, noting that he has long been a prominent fixture in the conservati­ve movement; he is, basically, a classic right-wing hack who tries (incompeten­tly) to impersonat­e an economic expert. Cain, on the other hand, is a spam king whose business model involves making his email list available to direct marketers.

Put it this way: In recent years, Moore has been out there predicting magical results from tax cuts, putting out fake economic numbers and giving speeches to FreedomFes­t. At the same time, Cain has been offering a platform for peddlers of get-rich schemes and cures for erectile dysfunctio­n. So it says something about what Trump wants that he apparently sees the two men as equally valuable allies.

What does Trump want? His attempted beclowning of the Fed follows, I’d argue, from the fact that his one major legislativ­e success, the 2017 tax cut — which he predicted would be

“rocket fuel” for the economy — has turned out to be a big fizzle, economical­ly and, especially, politicall­y.

It’s true that U.S. economic growth got a bump for two quarters last year, and Trumpists are still pretending to believe that we’ll have great growth for a decade. But at this point, last year’s growth is looking like a brief and rapidly fading sugar high. Meanwhile, the tax cut remains unpopular, partly because few people perceived personal benefits, partly because voters appear to be less concerned about paying too much than with the sense that the rich — the prime beneficiar­ies of the Trump cut — are paying too little.

Some leaders might see such disappoint­ments as reasons to make a course correction. But this is Trump: When the going gets tough, he blames someone else. Everything would have been great, he insists, if the Fed hadn’t thwarted his plans.

There’s a good argument to be made that the Fed misjudged the economy’s strength, that it raised interest rates too fast and that the economy would be doing somewhat better if it hadn’t. In fact, it’s an argument I agree with.

But that’s not what Trump is saying. He wants the Fed to act as if we were still in a deep depression; he wants it both to cut rates and to resume the emergency policies it pursued — and he denounced — when we had more than twice as much unemployme­nt as we do today. This would, he insists, turn the economy into the “rocket ship” he originally promised.

You don’t have to be a gold bug or even an inflation hawk to see these demands as deeply irresponsi­ble. Indeed, they sound a lot like the “macroecono­mic populism” that has repeatedly led to economic disaster in Latin America, with Venezuela the latest example.

Running the printing presses to fight a depression, as the Fed did after the financial crisis, is prudent and sensible; running them because you refuse to accept the reality that your policies aren’t delivering an economic miracle is different, and always ends badly.

Now, even putting both Moore and Cain on the Fed board probably wouldn’t be enough to push America over the monetary edge. And so far, markets don’t seem worried about the potential for runaway inflation.

But maybe investors should be worried, at least a bit, by the spectacle of a president who would rather appoint hacks and debase the Fed’s integrity than admit that his policies aren’t working as promised. U.S. policymaki­ng is looking ever more like that of a corrupt Third World regime. And that is bound, sooner or later, to have consequenc­es.

 ??  ?? Paul Krugman New York Times
Paul Krugman New York Times

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