Fed Rate Hike Coming in March
With inflation well above 2 percent and a strong labor market, the Committee expects it will soon be appropriate to raise the target range for the federal funds rate.
It is important to note that there is not a direct connection between federal fund rate hikes and changes in long-term interest rates. Indeed, during the last tightening cycle, the federal funds target rate increased from November 2015 (with a top rate of just 0.25%) to November 2018 (2.5%), a 225 basis point expansion. However, during this time mortgage interest rates increased by a proportionately smaller amount, rising from approximately 3.9% to just under 4.9%.
Nonetheless, the ongoing policy pivot will yield successively higher interest rates in 2022 due to tighter monetary policy. This change will reduce housing affordability and again emphasizes the need for policymakers to enact solutions to fix the nation’s supply-chains. With respect to this item, a contrarian take on monetary policy would point out that higher interest rates will not solve ongoing production and logistical challenges for supply-chains. In fact, higher rates could make them worse and continue to yield higher costs for the economy. Thus, monetary policy is not the only way to fight inflation.
By