The Tardy Fed and the New Macro

 | Feb 01, 2023 12:35PM ET

In 2021 and 2022 we called the Federal Reserve “tardy” on several occasions as they doggedly held to their “transitory” inflation stance long after reasonable people (using the right indicators) would have given up on such a notion. In May 2, 2022 we noted that they had finally started to move; too late.

Recently, Fed Governor Lael Brainard said the Fed could start reducing its balance sheet as soon as May at “a rapid pace”.

A rapid pace? Why that sounds a little desperate. Almost as if the big brains at the Fed had issued a collective “RUH ROH!!” as the final vestiges of their “transitory inflation” fantasy had slipped away into the ether and all at once they realized something drastic had to be done.

The Fed’s balance sheet, you ask? Well, it’s not a pretty sight as the Fed of today continues to cobble away at trying to fix the grossest distortion to date in its inflationary monetary policy. The 2008 spike, which seemed extreme at the time, is nothing compared to what went on in 2020.