LARRY KUDLOW: This is how the US can get out of an economic quagmire

Kudlow reflects on Reagan's policies

In just a moment, we’re going to talk to House Judiciary Chairman Jim Jordan about his center-stage, big-news hearing with FBI Director Christopher Wray, but first, the other piece of big news today was a lower-than-expected CPI inflation report.  

Both topline and core – excluding food and energy – increased at a scant two-tenths of a percent in June. Stock prices rallied and bond rates fell. So, Wall Street liked the report.  

The Fed is still probably going to raise their target rate by another quarter of a point to 5.5%, though, frankly, no one is sure why they’re going to do it, but a quarter is small beer, not worth arguing over.   

The 12-month change for the CPI is 3%, that’s a point above the Fed’s 2% target. The core rate is 4.8%. That’s more than twice the Fed’s target.  So, I suppose you could justify more rate hikes because actual inflation is still above the Fed’s target.  

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However, if you look at market-based price indicators, the Fed may have already done enough. I’m thinking of the upside-down yield curve, where short-term rates are way above longer-term yields. I’m also thinking of broad-based commodity indexes that really have been softening for over a year and a nod to Milton Friedman’s M2 money supply, which has collapsed over the past 18 months.   

The wonderful thing about these leading indicators of inflation is that the Fed doesn’t pay any attention to them. That’s too bad because markets are smarter than economic models. Take a moment for context. In the mid-1980s, Ronald Reagan appointed three brilliant Fed governors: Wayne Angell, Manley Johnson and Robert Heller. They’re all good friends of mine. Mr. Heller has appeared several times on this show.   

They pioneered the idea of using market-based price indicators, rather than Phillips curve models that purport to trade off inflation vs. employment.  Right now, you can bet the Fed staff thinks it has to tighten policy more because the unemployment rate is still too low at 3.6%.   

In other words, too many people are working, and that must be inflationary. If you think that’s a stupid idea, you would be right. More people working and producing goods and services is counter-inflationary.  

Back to the Reagan appointees and I would include former Fed chair Alan Greenspan – also appointed by the Gipper – who testified before Congress that gold was an important inflation indicator. This group of Fed officials launched 20 years of price stability by using market-based price indicators. 

They never get credit for what became known as "The Great Moderation." Principally, because they were Reagan appointees and the liberal media would never credit them with their awesome achievement and, basically, the Reagan supply-side tax cuts, along with the Fed’s strong commodity-based King Dollar, launched a 20-year economic boom. But the liberal media never gives the Gipper the kind of credit he deserves.  

President Ronald Reagan in oval office

(Original Caption) 6/15/1987-Washington, DC- President Reagan poses for photographers following his 6/15 nationally televised address to the nation. Reagan announced that the United States will formally propose the global elimination of all shorter-r (Bettmann / Contributor/Getty Images / Getty Images)

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I’m not saying inflation is over yet — specially with Joe Biden’s tax, spend, and regulate policies, which have stifled the economy and undermined incentives to work and invest.  The top-down industrial policy of picking winners and losers with frenzied $6 trillion spending in return for campaign contributions from woke corporate allies – a grift sometimes called "Bidenomics" – is going to make the Fed’s job of finally reaching their 2% inflation target much harder.   

Don’t despair, folks. There’s a way out of this economic quagmire. Remember Reagan? He cut tax rates and made King Dollar as good as gold. It worked for a long time. That’s my riff.  

This article is adapted from Larry Kudlow’s opening commentary on the July 12, 2023, edition of "Kudlow."