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Interest rates are up. Stocks — especially glamour stocks, like Tesla — are down. And the crypto crash has been truly epic. What's going on?
Well, many people I read have been offering an overarching narrative that runs something like this: For the past 10 or maybe even 20 years, the Fed has kept interest rates artificially low. Those low rates inflated bubbles everywhere as investors desperately looked for something that would yield a decent rate of return. And now the era of cheap money is over, and nothing will be the same.
You can see this narrative's appeal; it ties everything up into a single story. Yet to paraphrase H.L. Mencken, there is a well-known explanation for every economic problem — neat, plausible and wrong.
No, interest rates weren't artificially low; no, they didn't cause the bubbles; no, the era of cheap money probably isn't over.
Let's start with those interest rates. With respect to the real interest rate — the interest rate minus the expected rate of inflation — on 10-year U.S. government bonds since the 1960s, there was indeed a huge decline in real rates after 2000.
But was this decline "artificial"? What would that even mean? Short-term interest rates are set by the Federal Reserve, and long-term rates reflect expected future short-term rates. There's no such thing as an interest rate unaffected by policy. There is, however, something economists have long called the "natural rate of interest": the interest rate consistent with price stability, neither high enough to cause depression nor low enough to cause excessive inflation.