Finance & economics | The Fed’s mistake

After getting inflation so wrong, can the Fed now get it right?

The hawks are taking flight

|Washington, DC

IT WAS A simple, stunning admission. “We have had price stability for a very long time and maybe come to take it for granted,” said Jerome Powell, chairman of the Federal Reserve, last month. Many factors explain the latest burst in inflation, with snarled supply chains, tight job markets, generous fiscal stimulus, loose monetary policy and, more recently, the war in Ukraine all part of the fabric. But one thread runs through them all. Investors, analysts and, crucially, central bankers believed that high inflation in America had been consigned to history, a problem more for academic studies than for current policy.

This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “Hawks take flight”

The Fed that failed

From the April 23rd 2022 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Finance & economics

U.S. President Donald Trump smiles as he embraces his wife first lady Melania Trump as his family applaud him after being sworn-in during an inauguration ceremony in the Rotunda of the United States Capitol in Washington.

Why has Donald Trump held fire on tariffs?

The president had promised hefty levies immediately

China meets its official growth target. Not everyone is convinced

For one thing, 2024 saw the second-weakest rise in nominal GDP since the 1970s


Ethiopia's Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed speaks during the launch of the Ethiopian Securities Exchange in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, on January 10th 2025

Ethiopia gets a stockmarket. Now it just needs some firms to list

The country is no longer the most populous without a bourse


Are big cities overrated?

New economic research suggests so

Why catastrophe bonds are failing to cover disaster damage 

The innovative form of insurance is reaching its limits

“The Traitors”, a reality TV show, offers a useful economics lesson

It is a finite, sequential, incomplete information game