Must-read: Antonio Fatas: “A 2016 Recession Would Be Different”

Must-Read: “The years that the locust hath eaten, the cankerworm, and the caterpiller, and the palmerworm…” –Joel 2:25 (KJV). The task of fiscal and monetary policymakers as of the start of 2009 was (1) to arrest the slide, (2) to trigger a strong recovery, and (3) to set the world economy in a situation in which future policymakers would have the room to maneuver so that future substantial adverse macroeconomic shocks–and there would be future substantial adverse macroeconomic shocks–could be neutralized. They (probably) accomplished (1), they (certainly) failed at (2), and they continue to fail at even starting at (3)–and the fact that it is now seven years and they have not even started this task somehow fails to exercise them:

Antonio Fatas: A 2016 Recession Would Be Different: “1. The Yield curve would be very steep…

…2. The real federal funds rate (or the ECB real repo rate) would be extremely low…. 3. And nominal central bank interest rates would be stuck at zero…. So maybe this tells us that a recession is not about to happen. But if it is, the lack of space to implement traditional monetary policy tools should be a big concern for policy makers. If a recession ends up happening, helicopter money will likely become a policy option.

February 5, 2016

AUTHORS:

Brad DeLong
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