Finance & economics | A spike in the tail

Rallying markets suffer from a doveish illusion

Even as the Fed relaxes, real rates rise

U.S. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell addresses reporters after the Fed raised its target interest rate by a quarter of a percentage point, during a news conference at the Federal Reserve Building in Washington, U.S., February 1, 2023. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
Image: Reuters
|Washington, DC

The “money illusion” ranks among the more lyrical-sounding concepts in economics. It refers to the mistake that people make when they focus on nominal rather than real values. Anyone chuffed to get a hefty pay rise over the past year without considering whether, after inflation, they can actually buy more has fallen prey to the illusion. Financial investors ought to be savvier, but they too can be seduced by a lovely nominal story. The Federal Reserve’s downshift to smaller interest-rate rises is a case in point. It may look like a step away from hawkish monetary policy; in real terms, though, the central bank’s stance is tighter than it first appears.

This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “The doveish illusion”

From the February 4th 2023 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition
Commercial trucks cross over the Ambassador Bridge from Detroit, Michigan to Windsor, Ontario

Trump’s tariff turbulence is worse than anyone imagined

Even his concessions are less generous than expected

Illustration of a gold bar with human-like arms and legs, wearing a gold medal.

Why silver is the new gold

Safe-haven demand and solar panels have sent its price soaring


US-POLITICS-TRUMP-ECONOMY-CLIMATE-ENERGY

Trump’s new tariffs are his most extreme ever

America targets its three biggest trading partners: Canada, Mexico and China


El Salvador’s wild crypto experiment ends in failure 

Its curtailment is the price of an IMF bail-out. And one worth paying 

America is at risk of a Trumpian economic slowdown

Protectionist threats and erratic policies are combining to hurt growth

India has undermined a popular myth about development

Extreme poverty in the country has dropped to negligible levels