Skip to content
Subscriber Only
Opinion
Mohamed A. El-Erian

The Fed’s Barrage Faces Some Obstacles to Success

The central bank’s intervention carries the risk of backfiring.

A premature salvo risks economic well-being and financial stability.

A premature salvo risks economic well-being and financial stability.

Photographer: Keystone/Hulton Archive/Getty Images

The Sunday night action taken by six central banks will be looked back on as one of the biggest, multifaceted and coordinated monetary policy interventions in history. Its immediate aim is to avoid what was feared to be a messy market opening because of the flood of negative coronavirus news during the weekend. The risk is that the firing of so many bazookas at this particular stage ends up not just being premature for economic well-being but also for maintaining financial stability and perhaps for safeguarding the future effectiveness of modern central banking.

The Federal Reserve’s efforts will dominate the headlines given its status as the world’s most powerful central bank. In a “whatever it takes” policy approach, the Fed slashed interest rates to near zero, announced a $700 billion asset purchase program (quantitative easing) and, through coordination with the five other central banks, an enhancement of dollar-swap lines.