Monetary policy is directly responsible for economic and financial stability

In This Article:

  • The U.S. and the European Union economies are moving at different speeds, with different inflation rates, but within the same business cycle.

  • The Federal Reserve is facing accelerating inflation in a strengthening economy. A delayed policy response is raising the odds of a growth recession and declining dollar asset values.

  • The European Central Bank has an easier task of maintaining growth owing to a roughly balanced euro area budget, low core inflation and large trade surpluses.

Central banks are the top cops on the beat controlling the economy's lifeline. They see everything and know everything. If they don't, they are not doing their job. And if they don't promptly and properly act on what they see and know, they should think again about the sacred duty of public service.

It's that simple. A sobering reminder at the time of the Great Recession's sad anniversary, and the profound economic and political changes it has ushered in the trans-Atlantic community.

At the heart of that devastating event were serious errors of monetary policy, coupled with failures to effectively supervise and manage the financial system. The rest, as the saying goes, is history.

Ideally, it should be the history in Cicero's sense: "History is life's teacher" the Roman sage said, noting that reflections on the past should serve as lessons for the future.

An overwhelming majority of those warning about incipient financial crises tell us that we have learned nothing from the debacle that began to wreak havoc more than 10 years ago. By contrast, a distinct minority that believes that the West's financial system has been strengthened since the spectacular demise of Lehman Brothers is barely audible.

But, as always, blame-game debates and high-handed judgments are not particularly illuminating.

Can't have rising inflation and deficits without tears

I believe that the most useful discussion now would be to review the current monetary policies in the U.S. and the European Union — the two economic systems severely affected by the last financial crisis — and to draw some conclusions from that about the short- and medium-term economic outlook.

At the moment, the expansionary credit stance in the U.S. is part of a strong fiscal-monetary stimulus driving the economic growth in the first half of this year at an annual rate of 2.8 percent. That is an entire percentage point above the estimated potential and noninflationary growth rate of 1.8 percent set by the available stock and quality of human and physical capital.