World
US Federal Reserve
In its quest to fight soaring inflation, the Federal Reserve has raised interest rates again.
The Fed hiked interest rates by a mammoth 75 basis points (bps), which is the biggest rate increase since 1994. Through interest rate increases, the Fed is attempting to raise the cost to borrow money, slow economic activity, and bring down inflation in America, that’s ripping at 40-year-highs.
What led us here?
In 2021, Fed officials deemed inflation a “transitory” consequence of pandemic reopenings. But due to a mix of stronger than expected consumer demand, persistent logistics bottlenecks, Covid lockdowns in China, and the outbreak of war in Ukraine, prices kept going up.
Even as recently as just a few weeks ago, policymakers signaled they would be hiking rates by 50 bps. But prices have continued to climb sharply.
What happens now?
Even more rate increases. The Fed projected that it would hike rates by another 175 bps by the end of the year, to a level far above what it estimated in March.
Hiking interest rates this hard, this fast is painful for the economies and likely puts people out of work.
That’s the point, after all—people need to spend less for prices to come back down to earth. And it seems like that’s already happening, however, the risk is, that whilst combatting inflation, the Fed in US triggers a recession.
According to an analysis on inflation by Deutsche Bank, inflation has become a global phenomenon. The analysis included 111 countries.
According to the World Bank’s index, food commodity prices are at a record high and have risen sharply since Russia's invasion of Ukraine. The twin rise in food and energy prices is hitting countries particularly hard.
Energy prices in the U.S. are up 35 per cent over last year, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. In the UK they have spiked even higher, witnessing a sharp rise of 51 per cent. UK runs the risk of staring at a cost of living crisis.
China has significantly less inflation, compared to other countries. According to a report by WSJ, China remains an outlier in a world of surging inflation due to strong price controls and weak consumer demand coupled with Beijing’s relatively limited stimulus during the pandemic.