Testifying before Congress, Federal Reserve Chairwoman Yellen cherry picked data on inflation by noting prices are up, on a year-over-year basis, less than the Federal Reserve’s target of 2 percent. Â
The Labor Department’s Consumer Price Index has accelerated since March and was up 4.2 percent in May. Tuesday, it will release June data and perhaps not quite so high, it likely will show inflation continued above 3 percent.
Once inflation gets out of control, history has shown it is difficult to contain without a steep and painful recession. Recognizing these dangers, Yellen’s cognitive dissonance will add new life to proposals in Congress to rein in the Fed’s independence.
A bill under consideration would require the Fed to submit to Congress a detailed strategy or rule for the Fed’s policy instruments—for example, targets for money supply growth, lending rates to banks, etc.—and essentially handcuff quick Fed responses to emerging crises.
The Dodd-Frank legislation was intended both to curb destabilizing practices on Wall Street, and to permit the Fed to better respond to crises—for example, the 2008 Lehman Brothers collapse, which in the absence of Fed intervention caused the house of cards that was mortgage backed securities to collapse and ignited the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression.
The Fed’s credibility is already suffering greatly from the ill-considered actions of former Chairman Ben Bernanke and former Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner. Together, they bailed out the biggest financial firms but largely left top officials, with the exceptions of those seized by the federal government, to continue to find creative ways to gamble and pay themselves outlandish bonuses. For example, although banks don’t directly make private equity plays, they are financing those at alarming levels through questionable lending.
Instead of restoring Glass-Steagall and breaking up the biggest banks to a scale not too big to fail, they supported legislation to expand their regulatory empires with Dodd-Frank’s costly regulations. Compliance costs are a big reason why ordinary folks are losing free checking and paying generally higher service fees.