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MAY 12, 2023
Kuttner on TAP
More Reasons for the Fed to Relent
But don’t bet the farm on a saner monetary policy.
The latest inflation report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics combined with the continuing crisis afflicting regional banks gives the Federal Reserve good reason to stop punishing the economy with high interest rates. But it remains to be seen whether the Fed will come to its senses.

On Wednesday, the Consumer Price Index showed that inflation is continuing to subside. Prices in April were 4.9 percent higher than a year earlier, the lowest annual increase since the period ending April 2021. Wages were up 4.4 percent, so wages can’t be accused of pushing up prices. Adjusted for inflation, worker income continues to fall behind the cost of living.

A deeper look at the details of the BLS report shows even better news. Food prices did not increase at all in April. Gasoline increased only three-tenths of 1 percent. And the cost of electricity declined. Excluding food, energy, and shelter, where the BLS’s measure is misleading, the annual rate of inflation was just 3.7 percent. (Commercial indexes show rental costs and housing prices subsiding.)

Meanwhile, the crisis of regional banks seems to be deepening, an indirect casualty of the Fed’s high interest rates. Last week, panicky depositors pulled out 9.5 percent of PacWest's total deposits, and stock trading had to be suspended because of chaotic market conditions. Even so, the value of PacWest stock fell 23 percent yesterday, and PacWest was said to be seeking a buyer.

As I suggested in a recent post, the continuing woes of regional banks are the result of speculators shorting the bank’s stock, combined with bad Fed policy, which turns such speculation into a self-fulfilling prophecy. Given all of this, you might think that the Fed would relent. But several key Fed officials are still obsessed with the unrealistic inflation target of 2 percent, including New York Fed President John Williams.

Meanwhile, the economy continues to generate an impressive number of jobs, 253,000 in April, or far more than had been predicted by most forecasters. If we do manage the elusive "soft landing," and avoid a recession, it will be no thanks to the Fed.
~ ROBERT KUTTNER
So Long but Not Farewell to Envision
The private equity–owned ER doctor practice, now headed to bankruptcy, was one of the defining companies of 21st-century American medicine. BY MAUREEN TKACIK
The Judicial Deus Ex Machina Debt Ceiling Option
On today’s X-Date, liberals look to the courts to solve their intractable political problem. That spells trouble. BY DAVID DAYEN
The Half-Operational Digital Immigration Office
Want to apply for asylum? The government has an extremely janky app for that. BY JAROD FACUNDO
Will Dem PR Flacks Help Studios Crush Striking Writers Again?
How two ‘Masters of Disaster’ helped Hollywood execs break the last writers strike BY VISHAL SHANKAR
The Ends of Freedom
Professor Mark Paul explains how to fix America. BY PROSPECT STAFF
 
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