Business View Magazine Apr-2023

10 BUSINESS VIEW MAGAZINE VOLUME 10, ISSUE 4 to continue raising rates to slow down the economy. On the other hand, the recent collapses of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank have stirred concerns about the stability of America’s banking system, resulting in some investor sell-off. President Joe Biden attempted to calm any panic when the crisis began and said on March 13 that “Americans can have confidence that the banking system is safe” after the Federal Reserve, Department of the Treasury and Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation moved to guarantee all deposits at the failed banks. On Tuesday, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said the bank situation was “stabilizing.” Given the upheaval of the last few weeks, some experts predicted the Fed might pause its rate increases in order to project stability and prevent further panic. By raising rates a moderate quarter-point, the Fed appears to have decided to instead strike a balance. The Fed’s historic pace of interest rate increases is a stark departure from the recent past. For most of the past decade, the central bank’s policies made it cheap to borrow money economy-wide in an effort to stir growth, investment and employment. The Fed pivoted in March 2022 by raising interest rates to fight surging inflation, and the documentary explores the consequences of its monetary policies and what types of disruptions Americans can expect. The changes to the economic landscape in the U.S. mean an adjustment period as businesses, banks and individuals adapt to higher interest rates. In an interview conducted five months before the recent bank collapses, Age of Easy Money producer James Jacoby asked Neel Kashkari, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, how much disruption the Fed would tolerate in this adjustment period. Wednesday’s interest rate decision marks an important moment for the Federal Reserve, which has been caught between opposing forces in recent weeks. On one hand, the fight against inflation has yielded some results but is far from over, putting pressure on the Fed to continue raising rates to slow down the economy.

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