Fed, ECB Actions Too Late, Too Little, Too Lacking In Imagination

 | Mar 17, 2020 07:20

It turns out having lawyers instead of economists or central bankers at the head of the world’s two most important central banks kind of works in prosperous times but is a luxury we can ill afford in a crisis.

Both Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell and European Central Bank president Christine Lagarde have proven themselves not up to the task as their halting responses to the economic impact of the coronavirus pandemic have spectacularly backfired, robbing market participants of the last shreds of confidence in the central bank chiefs. (Those who read French might want to look at the One governing council member quoted anonymously in the Financial Times said by way of excusing Lagarde, “She just lost her concentration.” Really?

There were complaints—after his departure—that Mario Draghi was too autocratic in his tenure as Lagarde’s predecessor, often announcing measures without consulting the governing council. But is Europe really better off with a committee of 25 divided policymakers dithering over compromises under a president who is very much on a learning curve?

2008 Tool Kit No Solution For Pandemic-Fueled Economic Crisis/h2

Powell, meanwhile, waited too long for the Fed’s first emergency rate cut, made on March 3, of 0.5 percentage points, when an earlier intervention of greater scope might have supported market confidence and mitigated the panic. By the time the Fed came through with a bigger package—this weekend’s announcement of a further 1 percentage-point cut in rates to a virtual zero and restoration of asset purchases to the tune of $700bn, along with liquidity injections and foreign exchange swaps—the damage was already done and participants thought the Fed was just joining in the panic.