Last week, the Federal Reserve did the right thing by leaving well enough alone, keeping the benchmark interest rate at about 5.4 percent. With the pressure that the board and Chair Jay Powell have faced in the past several months, we're glad they've had the wisdom to know when to step back.

There have been those that, wedded to formulaic understandings about the economy, have insisted it's mechanically impossible for inflation to come down into acceptable ranges without seriously harming the economy. We've even heard that we need a recession, that a recession is the inevitable endpoint of a sadly necessary effort to wrangle inflation under control, and that the Fed should not have relented on its campaign to sharply raise rates.

These critics pointed to the 1970s and the reign of Paul Volcker. When things looked grim, the story goes, Volcker did what had to be done, pushing the economy into a recession with prolonged unemployment but in the process saving it from a worse spiral of soaring prices that threatened to derail the country's prosperous postwar climb.

The horrifying prospect that this approach may not really have been necessary is something the conventional economic view all but put out of mind.

We should all be mightily thankful that Powell and his Fed colleagues didn't listen to the naysayers, in part because of some powerful and clear-headed voices bucking the trend, including Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee. We now find ourselves right where they said we couldn't be: Not only have we avoided a recession, but by most metrics the economy is doing great. Unemployment is low, wages are gaining after a decades-long standstill, and inequality is a bit down.

None of that is to say that it's milk and honey for everyone out there; that we haven't had a recession doesn't mean that rising interest rates and inflation haven't hurt households, and the majority of Americans are still living paycheck to paycheck. The job isn't done, and a combination of factors including President Joe Biden's commitment to robust industrial policy and the resurgent power of labor organizing can keep pulling things in the right direction.

Is this graceful landing the product of the circumstances of the contemporary economic picture? Maybe, but what isn't? The point is that it worked, and what won't help now is if the Fed busies itself fixing what ain't broke.

Though the interest rates were kept steady this time around, Powell has repeatedly insinuated that he envisions a potential additional hike in the near term. This doesn't sound like too big of a deal given that the Fed's earlier series of successive rate increases did not drive us into recession already; what's another few basis points?

Yet the primary distinction between a healthy economy and a recession isn't whether interest rates were hiked--everyone agreed they had to be hiked--but how aggressively and how quickly. The problem is that once a recession sparks, it's next to impossible to get it back under control before it inflicts massive damage. Why would we play with fire when things are fine now?

The Fed should instead revel in pulling off what some thought impossible.

QOSHE - A wise decision - Karen Martin
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A wise decision

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07.11.2023

Last week, the Federal Reserve did the right thing by leaving well enough alone, keeping the benchmark interest rate at about 5.4 percent. With the pressure that the board and Chair Jay Powell have faced in the past several months, we're glad they've had the wisdom to know when to step back.

There have been those that, wedded to formulaic understandings about the economy, have insisted it's mechanically impossible for inflation to come down into acceptable ranges without seriously harming the economy. We've even heard that we need a recession, that a recession is the inevitable endpoint of a sadly necessary effort to wrangle inflation under control, and that the Fed should not have relented on its campaign to sharply raise rates.

These critics pointed to the 1970s and the reign of........

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