(NewsMax - Finance) - On the eve of a highly anticipated speech by Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell at Jackson Hole, Wyoming, on Friday, the original “Dr. Doom” is urging the Fed to become even more aggressive in its fight against inflation.
Henry Kaufman, Salomon Brothers chief economist during the hyperinflation of the 1970s, thinks Powell has not been heavy-handed enough, the Financial Times reports.
“I am still waiting for him to act boldly—‘boldly’ means he has to shock the market,” says Kaufman, also a former economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. “If you want to change someone’s view, if you want to change someone’s action, you can’t slap them on the hand. You have to hit them in the face.”
“Dr. Doom” maintains the Fed is still “behind the curve” in its battle to bring inflation down from its 40-year high of 8.5%, whereas Fed Chair Paul Volcker positioned himself well “ahead of the curve.”
Kaufman points to the fact that the Fed only began increasing interest rates in March, months after Powell finally admitted that inflation had become problematic.
Nouriel Roubini of Roubini Macro Associates—a former Clinton administration economic adviser and another economist who’s earned the “Dr. Doom” sobriquet—says the choices the Federal Reserve has in its monetary policy are stark: either a “hard landing,” i.e. a recession, or continued elevated inflation.
“The fed funds rate should be going well above 4%—4.5% to 5% in my view—to really push inflation towards 2%,” Roubini tells Bloomberg. “If that doesn’t happen, inflation expectations are going to get unhinged.”
By Lee Barney
August 25, 2022
August 28, 2022
More Articles
Switzerland Rejects Proposed 50% Inheritance Tax On Wealth Over 50 Million Francs
In Switzerland, the vote on the proposed inheritance tax for assets exceeding 50 million francs sparked significant debate.
Prairie Trust®: Building a Trust Company Around Advisor Relationships, Not Despite Them
“Advisor friendly” often functions as marketing jargon, but Prairie Trust® has built its trust administration model around the concept. VP and Director of Fiduciary Sales Terry Doyle explains how the firm maintains advisor relationships through custodian neutrality, responsive service, and willingness to handle complex estate settlements and special needs trusts—work many institutional trustees avoid. The approach has grown Prairie Trust from $350 million to more than $1.5 billion in assets under administration over 11 years.