Trump Tweets Aside, Here’s How The Fed Is Helping Economy

Trump Says Fed Chair Jay Powell Is Enemy Of The People
Trump Says Fed Chair Jay Powell Is Enemy Of The People

This post originally appeared on The Basis Point: Trump Tweets Aside, Here’s How The Fed Is Helping Economy

Trump Says Fed Chair Jay Powell Is Enemy Of The People
Trump Says Fed Chair Jay Powell Is Enemy Of The People

All politicians truncate economic details, but twitter president Trump ignores the actual economy. On Friday Fed chief Jay Powell gave a detailed speech about how the Fed is helping the economy. And how they’re trying to keep America’s longest-ever economic expansion going.

Yet Trump just dismissed Powell — the Fed chief he picked — as enemy of the people.

I get this soundbite game politicians play, and Trump plays better than everyone. But when it comes to how the economy plays next year, we need more than twitter details.

I also get that economic stuff can be super boring. So below I interpret Powell’s giant speech to explain what the Fed does and how they’re trying to help us.

Can this economy keep going strong? Let’s take a look.

ECONOMIC STRENGTH – AUGUST 2019

– The current U.S. expansion has entered its 11th year and is now the longest on record. The unemployment rate (now 3.7%) has fallen throughout the expansion and has been near half-century lows since early 2018.

– But that rate alone doesn’t fully capture the benefits of this strong job market. Labor force participation by people in their prime working years has been rising.

– For the past few years, wages have been increasing the most for people at the lower end of the wage scale.

– People who live and work in low- and middle-income communities tell the Fed that this job market is the best anyone can recall.

– Inflation has been surprisingly stable during the expansion. It’s a bit lower now, suggesting some economic weakness, but last year it help near the neutral 2% range.

– So we remain in the sweet spot: best possible employment situation and stable prices of goods and services.

– This is the Fed’s “dual mandate” – to make sure most of us have jobs and stuff is affordable enough for us to buy.

HISTORY LESSON ON FED HELPING ECONOMY

– Powell said economic boom and bust cycles were especially strong in the 1950s and 1960s. There were three in a row where we’d go back and forth between having a recession, then the economy would grow more than 6%!

– To put that in perspective, the economy grew by 3.1% in Q1 2019 and 2.1% in Q2.

– By the mid 1960s, Powell said this “stop and go” economy “had too much go and not enough stop.” This led to severe inflation by the 1970s, which means prices on everything got out of control for people. You can see the inflation spike on this chart.