The poky Fed interest rate elevator has far to go
To cause a recession, short-term interest rates need to be much higher. Despite the Federal Reserve’s rate-raising, the inflation-friendly, easy-money environment is still in place. Here is the situation…
The negative real interest rate environment continues
Because the Federal Reserve started in the 0% basement, it had a long way to go before short-term interest rates crossed the inflation line. At that point, the “real” (inflation-adjusted) interest rate goes from negative to positive.
Why is this a recession issue? Because tight money (with higher real interest rates) is a precursor of recessions. The history of interest rates, inflation, and recessions shows the link.
Here is a look at the Federal Funds interest rate compared to the 12-month trailing CPI (less food and energy) inflation rate. Tight money is when the interest rate is well above the CPI, no matter what that inflation rate is.
1958-2022 History: Federal Funds (green) vs CPI less food and energy (orange)
Perhaps easier to see is the difference between the Federal Funds rate and the CPI – the real interest rate. The current, still-large negative real interest rate is clearly visible, showing that easy money is still at work.
1958-2022 history: Real Federal Funds rate with pre-recession levels noted
Note that every recession (except the Covid-19 shutdown) is preceded by the Federal Fund rate rising well above the trailing 12-month inflation rate. While a recession doesn’t automatically follow a tightening, every recession has been preceded by one.
So, when will rates be high enough to cause a recession?
Looking at history, a real rate of over 2% would be high enough to cause concern. Assuming the inflation rate settles at around 5% in 2023, the Federal Funds rate would need to be over 7% to produce recession worry. Clearly, as the graph below shows, today’s Federal Fund rate range of 3% to 3.25% is far below that point.
Inflation rates remain much higher than Fed’s short-term rates
The bottom line – Interest rates aren’t everything
Notice in the graph above that high real rates don’t automatically produce recessions. For a recession (AKA, negative reversal) to take hold, there also needs to be a fundamental reason for it to occur. Typically, such are economy, financial and/or investment excesses or imbalances that require correction. Otherwise, the higher real rates can simply be caused by a healthy demand for capital.
Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/johntobey/2022/10/17/recession-nointerest-rate-still-too-low/