U.S. Policies Exporting Inflation
Fed Response to 2008 Crisis Ports Inflation to Other Nations: NCPA
Fed Response to 2008 Crisis Ports Inflation to Other Nations: NCPA
DALLAS, Dec. 3, 2015 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The Federal Reserve's adoption of an expansionary monetary policy following the 2008 recession ignored inflationary warning signs on the dollar standard's periphery, destabilizing both the U.S. and global economies, according to a new report by National Center for Policy Analysis Research Associate Hector Colon.
"With quantitative easing, the Fed intended for the 'excess' liquidity to push up asset prices, probably hoping that the 'wealth effect' of higher asset prices would spur economic activity in the United States," said Colon. "While experts still debate the success of the Fed's approach domestically, the policy has had noticeable international repercussions."
The Fed's actions impacted each country differently, depending on their monetary policy:
"The current Fed's policy is the equivalent of a regressive income-transfer policy," says Colon. "The economic distortions created by these unsustainable policies have produced a sluggish and vulnerable post-recession recovery, and created a workforce approaching full employment, but with the lowest labor participation rate since 1977."
Exporting U.S. Inflation: http://www.ncpa.org/pub/exporting-us-inflation
The National Center for Policy Analysis (NCPA) is a nonprofit, nonpartisan public policy research organization, established in 1983. We bring together the best and brightest minds to tackle the country's most difficult public policy problems — in health care, taxes, retirement, education, energy and the environment. Visit our website today for more information.
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SOURCE National Center for Policy Analysis
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