FUELING
CHANGE
Fed is losing credibility over its inflation
narrative, Mohamed El-Erian says
PUBLISHED
MON, NOV 15 20217:02 AM ESTUPDATED MON, NOV 15 20219:25 PM EST
Sam Meredith
@SMEREDITH19
The Federal Reserve is losing credibility over its
long-standing view that inflation is transitory, according to Mohamed El-Erian,
chief economic advisor at Allianz.
“I think
the Fed is losing credibility,” El-Erian said Monday. “I’ve argued that it is
really important to reestablish a credible voice on inflation and this has
massive institutional, political and social implications.”
He was
speaking to CNBC’s Dan Murphy at the ADIPEC energy industry forum in Abu Dhabi,
the United Arab Emirates.
El-Erian
contended that the Fed’s inflation stance weakened the central bank’s forward
guidance and undermined President Joe Biden’s economic agenda. He said that
people shouldn’t forget that those on low incomes are hardest hit by rising
consumer prices.
“So, it is
a big issue and I hope that the Fed will catch up with developments on the
ground,” he added.
A
spokesperson for the Federal Reserve was not immediately available to comment
when contacted by CNBC.
Fed Chair
Jerome Powell has previously said he expects inflation conditions to persist
“well into next year” and conceded it is “frustrating” that supply chain issues
are showing no signs of improvement. The Fed has largely stuck to its
messaging, however, that rising inflation is largely tied to the coronavirus pandemic
and these supply chain problems will pass.
The
consumer price index, which covers products ranging from gasoline and health
care to groceries and rents, rose 0.9% on a monthly basis in October, the Labor
Department reported on Nov. 10, significantly higher than expectations. The
reading climbed to 6.2% year over year, hitting its highest point since
December 1990.
‘It is not
transitory’
“We are in
this transition of central banks mischaracterizing inflation. The repeated
narrative: ‘It is transitory, it is transitory, it is transitory.’ It is not
transitory,” El-Erian said, warning the Fed risked making a major policy
mistake.
“We have
ample evidence that there are behavioral changes going on,” El-Erian said.
“Companies are charging higher prices [and] there’s more to come. Supply
disruptions are lasting for a lot longer than anybody anticipated. Consumers
are advancing purchases in order to avoid problems down the road — that of
course puts pressure on inflation. And then wage behaviors are changing.”
“So, if you
look at the underlying behavioral element that leads to inflation, you come up
with the conclusion that this will last for a while. And that’s even before you
talk about the renewed Covid disruptions,” he added.
El-Erian
cited the reintroduction of public health restrictions and the closure of ports
in big manufacturing nations, such as China and Vietnam, as examples of renewed
supply chain disruptions.
When asked
what the most appropriate response from the Fed would be, El-Erian said, “To
accelerate, in December, the pace of tapering.”
The Fed
said on Nov. 3 that it would start tapering the pace of its monthly bond
purchases “later this month.” The process will see reductions of $15 billion
each month — $10 billion in Treasurys and $5 billion in mortgage-backed
securities — from the current $120 billion a month that the Fed is buying.
“And
secondly, start doing what the Bank of England is doing … which is start preparing
people for higher interest rates,” El-Erian said, citing similar steps taken by
central banks from Australia, New Zealand and Norway, among many others.
— CNBC’s
Jeff Cox contributed to this report.
Correction:
Mohamed El-Erian spoke Monday. An earlier version misstated the day.
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário