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by altairprime
298 days ago
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I’ll consider your question, but I’m unlikely to complete the necessary research in time to respond before the thirty-day comment window closes. I do generally recommend this article as a useful survey slash starting point for understanding the nature of the relationship between Congress and the Fed if you’d like to pursue it further yourself: https://harvardlawreview.org/print/vol-138/the-federal-reser... |
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The fed funds rate is used as the foundation for nearly all lending that occurs in the US, and setting it is a key tool for regulating credit (the only job they have per this paper).
The paper also lays out how credit/money creation and destruction impacts the overall economy, so I can see how the Fed's actions related to regulating credit impact overall prices, but it's a second order effect at best and there doesn't seem to be any reasonable alternative?
I guess the issue is that the paper keeps talking about inflation caused by "supply-side issues", as if the cause of inflation can be clearly discerned at any point in time or that whatever inflation is caused by supply-side issues isn't tightly linked to the amount of credit available and therefore would fall under the purview of the Fed?