The Fed’s Got Inflation Backwards

 | Mar 20, 2023 01:36AM ET

Central banks endlessly fascinate me. The more I research them, the more contradictions I find, particularly since their missions and impacts have changed over time. Take the Federal Reserve (Fed), for example. It was originally created to countercyclically balance volatile market forces in times of stress.

However, the evolution of financial concepts—most notably money and inflation—have turned the Fed upside down. It no longer acts as a stabilizer. Rather, the Fed’s actions are now procyclical. Today, its monetary policy is fanning the flames of shortage-induced inflation.

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Central banks are a relatively new phenomenon in the modern world. Like many things, they’ve evolved. The first ones were private organizations that were granted special, privileged status by governments in return for purchasing their debts.

Specifically, these early central banks were granted monopolies over the issuance of banknotes (which served as national currencies) in exchange for lending governments much-needed funds. These include the Swedish Riksbank (1668), the Bank of England (1694), and the Banque de France (1800).