‘The Fed has made two major mistakes in its history,’ expert says. Here’s how those affect policy today

Personal finance

Federal Reserve Bank Chair Jerome Powell speaks during a news conference at the bank’s William McChesney Martin building on March 20, 2024 in Washington, DC. 
Chip Somodevilla | Getty Images

Slowly but surely, recessionary talk is dying down and confidence in the Federal Reserve is picking up.

Last week, the central bank held its benchmark rate steady — as expected — amid signs of positive economic growth, and signaled it plans multiple cuts before the end of the year.

Chairman Jerome Powell indicated that with the economy still growing at a healthy pace and unemployment below 4%, the Fed can take a more measured approach when loosening monetary policy.

However, if history is any guide, there would likely still be some significant economic disruptions before this period of elevated inflation is over, according to Mark Higgins, senior vice president for Index Fund Advisors and author of “Investing in U.S. Financial History: Understanding the Past to Forecast the Future.”

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Monetary policy is a balancing act, Higgins said.

“When you have extended periods of high inflation, to get back to price stability, you usually go too far in the other direction,” Higgins said.

At least, that is how it has played out in the past, he said.

The Fed’s ‘two major mistakes’

“The Fed has made two major mistakes in its history,” according to Higgins, and those two missteps still influence the central bank’s moves today.

“The first [mistake] was allowing the banking system to fail in the early 1930s, which caused the Great Depression to deepen significantly,” he said. “The second was the great inflation of the 1970s when inflationary pressures picked up and the Fed tightened but backed off prematurely, which is the risk the Fed faces now.”

While financial regulations and the creation of deposit insurance could prevent a widespread banking crisis from happening today, “the real danger here is that the Fed loosens prematurely, which is exactly what they did in the late 1960s,” Higgins said.

By the early 1980s, prolonged high inflation had become so entrenched, Paul Volcker, then Fed chair, had to get even more aggressive to tighten the money supply.

The benchmark rate, which is the rate at which banks borrow and lend to one another overnight but also feeds through to many forms of consumer debt, reached a record 22.36% in July 1981. Today it’s in a range between 5.25%-5.5%.

Indeed, Volcker was able to ultimately break inflation, but shockingly high interest rates also brought the economy to its knees (and the housing market to a standstill).

“Deep down, Powell is petrified of redoing Volcker again,” Steven Eisman, Neuberger Berman’s senior portfolio manager, said recently on CNBC’s “Squawk Box.”

The Fed has “engineered what looks to be a soft landing, inflation is coming down, the economy is still strong, why would you waste rate cuts now and risk a resurgence of inflation when really all you need to do is declare victory?” he said.

Today, Higgins said, “the risks of allowing inflation to persist still far outweighs the risk of triggering a recession. [The Fed’s] failure to do this in the late 1960s is one of the major factors that allowed inflation to become entrenched in the 1970s.”

The risks of allowing inflation to persist still far outweighs the risk of triggering a recession.
Mark Higgins
author of “Investing in U.S. Financial History: Understanding the Past to Forecast the Future.”

Those inflation-busting efforts and the aftermath have clearly had a lasting impact on the central bank.

Even in prepared remarks earlier this month, Powell referenced Volcker’s earlier interest rate policy as a reason policymakers don’t want to ease up too quickly now. “Reducing policy restraint too soon or too much could result in a reversal of progress we have seen in inflation and ultimately require even tighter policy to get inflation back to 2%,” Powell said.

This time around, the central bank is likely to remain extremely cautious, Higgins said, even if that means holding rates higher for longer.

“My gut is that they are aware of the risks and won’t ease too early,” he said.

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