The Federal Reserve is, after all, a more credible central bank than the others
The Federal Reserve is normalising its interest rates cautiously, in a way that is unlikely to weaken the US economy. In contrast, the ECB, the Bank of Japan, the Bank of England and the Swedish Riksbank persist with negative, zero or slightly positive key interest rates despite an improvement in the economy. This choice by the Federal Reserve seems to us far superior for three reasons: It eliminates the massive gap between nominal potential growth and interest rates in the United States, which can be observed in the other countries (euro zone, Japan, United Kingdom, Sweden) and which creates major distortions in investment choices; It will enable the Federal Reserve to respond in the event of an abnormal slowdown in growth, which the other central banks will not be able to do; It attracts international capital to the United States, at the expense of the other countries whose savings it thereby captures .