The economy seems to be getting better -- in a v-shaped recovery -- despite the "fashion" of economists and other gloom and doomers.
The Fed? Doing nothing. Guess they are resting from all the hard work.
Senator Schumer and others seem to like the Fed -- as the master regulator. They seem to have quite the position -- create problems, solve them, get more money and power, create bigger problem.
The Fed has to stop fooling with the short-term interest rates. History has repeatedly shown that artificially low interest rates (like real interest rates below zero and below any sense of risk adjusted rates) creates economic distortions and asset bubbles.
But the Treasury and Fed continue to favor their friends at financial institutions. They say lowering the short-term rate, steepening the yield curve, making financial institutions more profitable -- will have a trickle down effect, and help the economy.
This is the work of intellectuals -- that say pushing a button on their computer to lower the interest rates -- will be the easy way to push the economy up and down.
This recovery has been the work of Keynesian stimulus, the hard work of employees/managers making the best of things, and the unfailing consumer -- with the ambition, optimism, and courage to ride out these storm visions (created by the intellectuals and the media).
Fed, and Central Banks around the world, please keep short-term interest rates above the risk-adjusted real rate. Stop the asset bubbles. The "quantitative easing" was good. Let's funnel the money directly to companies and consumers -- purchase of commercial paper, policy banks that support exports and research and investments, subsidies like cash for clunkers that have a multiplier effect on spending.
Clearly, many benefit from the ups and downs of the markets (and perhaps economies). I think real people benefits from low volatility, low transition cost -- a steady opportunity for people to better their lot in life.
And the Fed should work for the real people.