Fed Watch: Is An Economic Storm About To Hit?

 | Apr 26, 2021 04:24

The Federal Open Market Committee is not expected to announce any policy changes after its two-day meeting this week, or even to provide any concrete guidance about when it will start tapering its asset purchases as a prelude to raising rates.

Economists expect the Fed policymakers to amp up their view of economic growth, while reassuring investors, as they have in the past few months, that they will not let up on monetary stimulus until there is a lot more improvement in employment, including fixes in structural employment. Inflation, they keep saying, is not a problem.

Larry Lindsey, who was director of the National Economic Council under President George W. Bush and a Fed governor in the 1990s, thinks the Fed is underestimating the risk of inflation. Demand is being fueled by massive government spending, which is not likely to abate next year ahead of the midterm election, while supply is increasingly constrained by shortages.

Moreover, in his view, these shortages include skilled labor. Fed officials may want to improve the equity in employment, but they cannot give unskilled workers the training they need to provide what companies need. This means firms will have to offer higher wages to hire the workers they want and the Fed’s ambition for maximum employment across the board may be frustrated by inflation.