Things to Read on the Morning of October 14, 2014

Must- and Shall-Reads:

 

  1. Òscar Jordà, Moritz Schularick, and Alan Taylor: The Great Mortgaging: “In 17 advanced economies since 1870…. (1) Mortgage lending was 1/3 of bank balance sheets about 100 years ago, but in the postwar era mortgage lending has now risen to 2/3, and rapidly so in recent decades. (2) Credit buildup is predictive of financial crisis events, but in the postwar era it is mortgage lending that is the strongest predictor of this outcome. (3) Credit buildup in expansions is predictive of deeper recessions, but in the postwar era it is mortgage lending that is the strongest predictor of this outcome as well…”

  2. Paul Hannon: Eurozone Factory Output Slumps: “August Figures Show Largest Decline Since the Months Following the Collapse of Lehman Brothers: Factory output across the 18 countries that use the euro slumped in August, driven by the largest decline in the manufacture of capital goods since the months following the collapse of Lehman Brothers, and possibly reflecting a similar decline in global business confidence. The European Union’s statistics agency Tuesday said production by factories, mines and utilities during August was 1.8% lower than in July, and 1.9% lower than in the same month of 2013…. The decline more than reversed a 0.9% gain in July, and suggests it is possible output for the third quarter as a whole will be lower than for the second quarter…”

  3. Ryan Avent: Monetary policy: When will they learn?: “THE monetary economics of a world in which interest rates are close to zero are not especially mysterious. Stimulating the economy at that point requires central banks to raise expected inflation. Disinflation, by contrast, results in passive tightening, since the central bank can’t lower its policy rate…. In this world, the downside risks are much larger than those to the upside. There is infinite room to raise interest rates if inflation runs uncomfortably high…. But there is no room to reduce interest rates if inflation is running to low. That, in turn, forces central banks to use unconventional policy or run psychological operations to try to boost expectations. Central banks are not very good at those sorts of things. You need to overshoot, in other words, because undershooting feeds on itself…”

  4. Ann Marie Marciarille: Missouri State of Mind: The CDC Says Ebola Should Be as Easy as MRSA for an Acute Care Hospital to Contain: “The CDC Says Ebola Should Be as Easy as MRSA for an Acute Care Hospital to Contain
    Who else felt a shiver go up their spine when the CDC announced that any acute care facility capable of implementing strict infection control procedures should be capable of caring for an Ebola Virus case? Well, if you know anything at all about infection control success at U.S. acute care hospitals, this should have given you pause. Strict infection control in U.S. acute care facilities has not been our long suit. When I made this observation in a talk  on health care quality at the University of Toledo School of Law’s joint medical-legal conference (‘Scalpel to Gavel’) this past Friday, it provoked audible, if uneasy, laughter from the health care provider-heavy crowd. The way I see it, the least well informed about health care (those who think the Ebola virus is naturally spread by airborne measures) and the best informed about health care (those who are cognizant of our astonishingly poor record on implementing infection control procedures) share a common fear. The Ebola Virus certainly makes for some interesting bedfellows.”

  5. David Wessel: Lousy Economic Growth Is a Choice, Not an Inevitability: “The notion that all this is inevitable and economic policy has done all that it can do is defeatist and wrong…. The Federal Reserve has done a lot, more than some Fed policymakers would have liked, not enough for its critics. But fiscal policy in the U.S. at the local, state and federal levels has been a restraint on growth…. And gridlock in Congress is an obstacle…. Matters are even worse in Europe. Mario Draghi is stepping up his efforts at the European Central Bank with resistance from Germany. German politicians appear reluctant to take the widespread advice that a country with strong government finances, a trade surplus, decaying  infrastructure, a slowing (if still low-unemployment) economy, and a huge stake in the European project should be investing more in infrastructure, considering pro-investment tax cuts, and raising wages…. ‘There is a real risk of subpar growth persisting for a long period of time, but what is important is that we know it can be averted,’ Ms Lagarde said at the end of the weekend meetings of economic policymakers from around the world. ‘We know it can be averted. And, it will require some political courage, some will, some degree of realism on the part of national legislatures, but it can be done.’ In other words, settling for the ‘new mediocre’ is a choice.”

Should Be Aware of:

 

  1. Simon Wren-Lewis: mainly macro: The mythical Phillips curve?): “Suppose you had just an hour to teach the basics of macroeconomics, what relationship would you be sure to include? My answer would be the Phillips curve…. My faith in the Phillips curve comes from simple but highly plausible ideas. In a boom, demand is strong relative to the economy’s capacity to produce, so prices and wages tend to rise faster than in an economic downturn. However workers do not normally suffer from money illusion: in a boom they want higher real wages to go with increasing labour supply. Equally firms are interested in profit margins, so if costs rise, so will prices. As firms do not change prices every day, they will think about future as well as current costs. That means that inflation depends on expected inflation as well as some indicator of excess demand, like unemployment…. This combination of simple and formal theory would be of little interest if it was inconsistent with the data. A few do periodically claim just this…. (For example here is Stephen Williamson talking about Europe.)… If this was true, it would mean that monetary policymakers the world over were using the wrong framework in taking their decisions…. So is it true?… Just look at the raw data on inflation and unemployment for the US, and see whether it is really true that it is hard to find a Phillips curve…. We start down the bottom right in 1961…. The pattern[s] we get are called Phillips curve loops: falling unemployment over time is clearly associated with rising inflation, but this short run pattern is overlaid on a trend rise in inflation because inflation expectations are rising…. 2000 to 2013… looks much more like Phillips’s original observation: a simple negative relationship between inflation and unemployment. This could happen if expectations had become much more anchored as a result of credible inflation targeting, and survey data on expectations do suggest this has happened to some extent…. Once again the Phillips curve is pretty flat. We go from 4% to 10% unemployment, but inflation changes by at most 4%…. Given how ‘noisy’ macro data normally is, I find the data I have shown here pretty consistent with my beliefs.”

  2. John Cassidy: A Worthy Economics Nobel for Jean Tirole: “In general, I’m not a fan of the economics Nobel. Too often… used to reward free-market orthodoxy…. At other times… a glorified long-service award… Buggins’s turn… work… innovative and influential in its own context [that] has little broader social value…. The very existence of the prize has contributed to the pretense that economics can, with the application of enough mathematics, be converted from a messy social science into a hard science along the lines of physics and chemistry. However, if the Swedes are going to persist in celebrating economists on an annual basis, this year’s honoree, the French theorist Jean Tirole, is a worthy one…. Tirole and his colleagues, particularly the late Jean-Jacques Laffont, didn’t establish a set of hard-and-fast rules for governments to follow in individual cases. But they did create a unifying intellectual framework that regulators, aggrieved parties, and the companies themselves can draw on in thinking through the relevant issues…. The essential insight here is that regulation isn’t just a mathematical exercise in designing price schedules that lead to efficiency. It’s an ongoing game between two players with different goals and secrets that they can hide from each other… a ‘principal-agent’ problem, where the government is the principal and the firm is the agent. The general question then becomes this: Can you design a regulatory system that offers incentives to both sides—the regulators and the firms—to do things that are in the public interest?…”

  3. Ezra Klein: “Yes Means Yes” is a terrible law, and I completely support it: “The Yes Means Yes law could also be called the You Better Be Pretty Damn Sure law. You Better Be Pretty Damn Sure she said yes. You Better Be Pretty Damn Sure she meant to say yes, and wasn’t consenting because she was scared, or high, or too tired of fighting. If you’re one half of a loving, committed relationship, then you probably can Be Pretty Damn Sure. If you’re not, then you better fucking ask. A version of the You Better Be Pretty Damn Sure law is already in effect at college campuses. It just sits as an impossible burden on women, who need to Be Pretty Damn Sure that the guy who was so nice to them at the party isn’t going to turn into a rapist if they let him into their dorm room — and that’s not something anyone can be sure about. It’s easier to get someone’s consent than it is to peer into their soul…”

October 14, 2014

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