Blinkered, Cocooned Fed And ECB Offer Slow Policy Responses To Pandemic

 | Apr 13, 2020 03:52AM ET

Nobody can complain that the U.S. Federal Reserve isn’t throwing trillions of dollars at the domestic and global economy to cope with the economic impact of the coronavirus pandemic. And it seems to be enough at the moment, combined with unprecedented fiscal stimulus and a slowing of infections in many places, to stabilize the financial markets and keep credit flowing.

What people can complain about, however, is that the U.S. central bank's policymakers didn’t act sooner, in a bolder fashion. The minutes of two March emergency meetings released last week give us an idea of why they didn’t.

h2 Fed: Where's The Alarm Or Empathy?/h2

Even at the second videoconference meeting on March 15—when markets were tanking, investors were panicking and people were already unable to go to work, prompting the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) to lower the benchmark interest rate a full percentage point to 0 to 0.25 percent, after having already lowered it a half point on March 3—even then there was this astounding statement:

“Some participants remarked that the committee's policy actions regarding the target range and balance sheet could be interpreted as conveying negative news about the economic outlook.”

Really? People were going to start worrying about the economic outlook because the Fed lowered rates a percentage point when hospital emergency rooms were filled to overflowing, doctors were playing god with the ventilators that were available to determine who would live, and the entire global economy had ground to a halt?