KEY POINTS
  • The Biden administration misread the rising threat of inflation for a variety of reasons, according to several economists and current and former government officials.
  • Those reasons include Fed influence across the administration, the folly of traditional economic forecasting, political pressure to spend big and a lack of urgency in deciding who would run the Federal Reserve, they said.
  • "It's always going to be an issue in any White House, how the policy and politics interact," said a former Fed official. "I just think they miscalculated."
U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen (L) and Federal Reserve Board Chairman Jerome Powell (R) testify during a hearing before Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee on Capitol Hill November 30, 2021 in Washington, DC.

When President Joe Biden nominated former Fed Chair Janet Yellen to run the Treasury Department, his rationale was simple: "No one is better prepared to deal with this crisis."

The crisis to which he referred was a "K-shaped" economic recovery that had exacerbated inequality in the wake of a once-in-a-generation pandemic. The administration had a simple plan, and Yellen would help carry it out. Once hundreds of millions of Americans were vaccinated against Covid-19, and trillions of dollars in new government spending flowed into the economy, the world would return to normal under a supercharged recovery.