More Unsolicited Advice From IMF

 | Jun 26, 2015 11:42AM ET

The leadership at the Federal Reserve has consistently signaled its intention to lift rates this year. It is conditioned on the labor market continuing to absorb the slack, and provided the officials can be "reasonably confident" that the inflation target will be reached on a medium term.

The IMF has argued against this. It has suggested that the Fed wait until next year. Despite the lag time between the implementation of monetary policy and its economic effect, the IMF thinks inflation needs to rise more before a rate hike is appropriate. Temporal inconsistencies do not seem to bother it. If the Fed were to wait, forcing what some officials have suggested would be a steeper increase later, the IMF would likely criticize it for waiting too long.

The IMF has come out with more unsolicited advice. A new staff paper suggests the Fed should drop the dot-plots and offer a single staff forecast similar to the ECB. The paper suggests this would improve the effectiveness of monetary policy. This Great Graphic that shows the March and June dot plots was published on Business Insider.