|
|
|
|
|
by adam419
3487 days ago
|
|
Too many assumptions about my opinions being made from my statement (which I agree I didn't substantiate). I'm making a more broad critique of fed. We should have a federal reserve, but one who doesn't engage in central planning and has a healthy respect for the efficacy of free markets. If they raised rates fully in 2011-2013 they would've been heros, now they've completely distorted the global economy because prices simply cannot reflect information about the economy when money itself so widely fluctuates. Money is a measuring stick, plain and simple. Economic activity can be thought of as scientific experimentation, except the results of these experiments can't reliably be measured when the measuring stick itself changes widely for political, and not fundamental reasons. I'm not really making an argument for institutional changes, just that the people currently occupying the fed are benevolent morons. |
|
The entire purpose of a central bank is to do central planning of monetary policy, so I'may not sure what a federal reserve that doesn't do central planning even means.
> If they raised rates fully in 2011-2013 they would've been heros, now they've completely distorted the global economy because prices simply cannot reflect information about the economy when money itself so widely fluctuates.
It sounds like you want them to do central planning, but optimizing different variables (rather than managing inflation against full employment, it sounds like you want them optimizing the much less clearly measurable degree to which prices reflect information about the economy.)
I'm also not sure what "raise rates fully" is supposed to mean; there isn't a fixed ceiling on rates.
Further, I'd like to see some reason to believe that your preferred policy would actually have produced better results by any concrete measure.
> I'm not really making an argument for institutional changes, just that the people currently occupying the fed are benevolent morons.
Well, you are clearly saying that. Some kind of support for that claim would be nice before calling it an argument.