Sooner or later, America’s financial system could seize up
The Federal Reserve must soon decide when to stop shrinking its balance-sheet
Masterly inactivity is back in vogue at the Federal Reserve’s rate-setting committee. After its meeting on June 14th it kept its benchmark rate on hold, rather than raising it, for the first time since January 2022. One or two more rate rises may lie ahead: Jerome Powell, the Fed’s chairman, suggested so in his post-meeting press conference, and that is what investors expect. Gradually, though, the main debate among Fed watchers has shifted from how high the rate will go to how long it will stay there before being cut.
This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “The Fed’s other quandary”
Finance & economics June 17th 2023
- Is the global housing slump over?
- A new super-regulator takes aim at rampant corruption in Chinese finance
- Sooner or later, America’s financial system could seize up
- AI is not yet killing jobs
- America is losing ground in Asian trade
- Wage-price spirals are far scarier in theory than in practice
- South Korea has had enough of being called an emerging market
More from Finance & economics
Will America’s crypto frenzy end in disaster?
Donald Trump’s team is about to bring digital finance into the mainstream
Do tariffs raise inflation?
Usually. But the bigger problem is that they harm economic growth and innovation
European governments struggle to stop rich people from fleeing
Exit taxes are popular, and counter-productive
Saba Capital wages war on underperforming British investment trusts
How many will end up in Boaz Weinstein’s sights?
Has Japan truly escaped low inflation?
Its central bankers are increasingly hopeful
How American bankers dodged the MAGA carnage
The masters of the universe have escaped an anti-globalist revolt