As the FERAL Reserve is committed to raising interest rates no matter the cost, even if it means deliberately engineering a recession, in an attempt to quash the worst inflation in 40 years, we would like to warn them as follows:
Stand. Down. NOW. And prepare to reverse course a full 180 degrees, and soon.
And the same goes for their Quantitative Tightening (QT) as well, which of course amplifies the effect of raising interest rates by literally sucking money out of the economy, thus shrinking the money supply. And it doesn't take a rocket scientist to see that, since there is exponentially more debt in the overall economy in 2022 compared with 1982, even a fairly modest increase in interest rates can have a much larger adverse effect now compared to back then.
Paul Volcker, former Fed chairman, (in)famously raised interest rates as high as 20% in the early 1980s, and it technically "worked" to quash inflation. But it came at a terrible price: not only a pair of really bad recessions with millions of jobs lost, but the resulting damage also inflicted serious sequelae upon the broader working class that persist to this day as well, both in the USA as well as abroad. The first time, one could say it was naive at best. Doing "The Volcker" a second time, however, would be downright stupid, if not utterly malicious, narcissistic, and even sadistic.
And the USA was actually one of the luckier countries. Canada, for example, set interest rates even higher still, and kept them higher for longer than the USA, and they got even higher and more persistent unemployment as result, and inflation persisted longer as well. It was a complete lose-lose proposition for them. So don't do it again!
As the old adage goes, when the only tool you have is a hammer, everything starts to look like a nail. And this particular tool is like swatting a fly with a sledgehammer, or burning down the house to roast a pig. And worse, it is fundamentally the wrong tool for the job. Most inflations, including this one especially, are caused by shortages of goods and services. The only real cure is to solve the shortages, something higher interest rates simply cannot do no matter HOW high they are (at best it reduces demand and squeezes "inflationary psychology" out the system, and at worst it simply exacerbates the "cost-push" side of inflation when kept too high for too long).
And Rodger Malcolm Mitchell notes that governments can easily solve shortages by purchasing at a premium whatever goods or services happen to be in short supply, which incentives production, and then re-selling them (or giving them away) at a loss. Higher interest rates do absolutely zilch for that.
Of course, we would not have gotten into this situation had our "leaders" not imposed lockdowns in a futile attempt to control an airborne respiratory virus, and then tried to paper over the inevitable and predictable consequences by printing ludicrous and unprecedented amounts of money that overwhelmingly went toward further enriching the already ultra-rich. Had we instead adopted the time-tested "flu strategy" from the get-go, with or without a more moderate stimulus package for We the People, we would not have gotten in this predicament in the first place. Yes, there may have been some leftover problems in the bond markets and especially the repo market from 2019, and the virus would have been somewhat disruptive to the economy, (like the 1957 and 1968 flu pandemics), but nothing even in the same league as what happened with lockdowns. And from what we have learned the hard way, death rates would have been about the same or even lower.
(No really, cumulative excess all-cause death rates for countries, states, and communities that largely ignored the virus, or at least eschewed lockdowns and more-restrictive NPIs, were actually within error bounds or even lower than for their much stricter neighbors or national/regional averages.)
When you try to "burn the village to save it", eventually the village will return the favor. It is simply the law of cause and effect, also known as karma. Sooner or later, you always reap what you sow. And as the saying goes, hindsight is quite literally 2020. Will the Fed answer the "clue phone"?
UPDATE: The Brownstone Institute has an excellent article discussing how the combination of lockdowns and the aftermath (forced massive supply crunch) + stimulus (massive demand boost), followed by the Russia-Ukraine war and sanctions, unleashed the worst inflation in 40 years. You mean you can't just paper over a massive supply crunch with more demand? And that war and sanctions are both negative-sum games in which everyone loses to one degree or another? Gee, who woulda thunk it?
The money supply has been shrinking at a record pace in recent months, thanks to the FERAL Reserve's Quantitative Tightening. Usually a shrinking money supply portends recession, historically speaking.
Of course, the other elephant in the room is corporate greed. They ultra-rich and mega-corporations are taking in record profits, so it is not simply that they are passing higher costs of doing business onto the customers. An excess profits tax would be the best way to curtail this sort of inflation, as would a one-off wealth tax on like richest folks, much like several countries did after WWII. Keep in mind that Trump himself actually proposed such a wealth tax back in 1999, and not a trivial one either, so the MAGA crowd would be truly hypocritical to oppose it.