The Federal Reserve: Damned If It Does, Damned If It Doesn’t

To hike or not to hike? That is the question.

Indeed, that has been the question for what seems like an eternity. But the question of whether or not the Federal Reserve is going to raise interest rates in December misses the point. The truth is, the Federal Reserve is damned if it does and damned if it doesn’t.

The “rate hike hype” began nearly three years ago. We’ve experienced almost 36 months of wishy washy, back and forth, pseudo-scientific attempts to decipher increasingly vague and non-conclusive Fed minutes as to when, how much, and what kind of rate hike we can expect.

You don’t have to be a professional economist to recognize the Fed policy as a stall tactic. Peter Schiff has called them out on this point time and again, showing that if they really wanted to raise rates, they would have done so by now.

Even some mainstream financial media outlets are starting to poke fun at what’s come to resemble a bad soap opera suspense drama. Earlier this month, Bloomberg Media featured a video titled, “Can we glean anything from the Fed’s Tea leaves?” You know things are bad when Bloomberg equates interpreting the central bank’s official minutes to tea leaf reading.

The bottom line is that the constant delays have called the Fed’s credibility into question. It’s like the boy who cried wolf. Every time the Fed goes out in front of the public and says, “This is not the month, but next month…” it takes yet another blow to its credibility.

This has to be an uncomfortable situation for the members of the Federal Reserve, especially if they really don’t want to raise rates – and they likely don’t. They certainly have plenty of reasons not to. As we explained earlier this year, the Fed must continue the pretense of being solvent to maintain its credibility as a financial institution. Just last week, Peter argued that the Fed won’t likely raise rates in December because it is focused on keeping a market bubble inflated instead of allowing the US to experience a painful, but necessary economic recovery. In fact, lackluster Black Friday sales may provide the perfect excuse to put off the “anticipated” December rate hike.

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Author: Travis Esquivel

Travis Esquivel is an engineer, passionate soccer player and full-time dad. He enjoys writing about innovation and technology from time to time.

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