Must-read: Barry Eichengreen: “Reforming or Deforming the Fed?”

Barry Eichengreen: Reforming or Deforming the Fed?: “Some… proposals by Bernie Sanders… deserve to be taken seriously…

…The fact that three of the nine directors of the Fed’s regional reserve banks are private bankers is an anachronism that creates the appearance, and potentially the reality, of a conflict of interest. Sanders’ suggestion that the US president, rather than their own directors, nominate the regional reserve banks’ presidents is also worthy of consideration…. The peculiar arrangements prevailing today were designed to overcome the financial sector’s opposition to the establishment of a central bank when the Federal Reserve Act was passed in 1913. This, clearly, is no longer the problem….

Other proposals… are more dubious…. To release full transcripts six months after Fed meetings would guarantee a scripted debate. Meaningful discussion would simply move to the anteroom. The result, perversely, would be a decline in policy transparency.

Today’s economic history: William McChesney Martin’s “Punchbowl Speech”

William McChesney Martin (1955): Punchbowl Speech (October 19, 1955): “In framing the Federal Reserve Act great care was taken to safeguard…

…this money management from improper interference by either private or political interests. That is why we talk about the overriding importance of maintaining our independence. Hence we have our system of regional banks headed up by a coordinating Board in Washington intended to have only that degree of centralized authority required to discharge effectively a national policy. This constitutes, as those of you in this audience recognize, a blending of public interest and private enterprise uniquely American in character. Too few of us adequately recognize or adequately salute the genius of the framers of our central banking system in providing this organizational bulwark…

Must-read: Gavyn Davies: “China devaluation – a necessary evil?”

Must-Read: Gavyn Davies: China devaluation – a necessary evil?: “The 9 percent drop in global equity prices in the first two weeks of 2016…

…is certainly alarming, even for those of us who believe that the outlook for the world activity has not deteriorated much recently. The fundamental cause is the same as it was last August – a clash between a severe loss of credibility in Chinese economic policy and a Federal Reserve that still seems determined to continue tightening US monetary policy without much regard to international risks and a slowing domestic economy (see the hawkish Bill Dudley speech on Friday)…

Must-read: Barry Eichengreen: “Reforming or Deforming the Fed?”

Barry Eichengreen: Reforming or Deforming the Fed?: “Proposals for a ‘Taylor rule’ are… merely a formula purporting to explain…

…why the Fed set its policy interest rate as it did in the 1980s and early 1990s, the period Taylor considered in his original study… a guide for desirable policy only if one thinks that the policies followed in that period were desirable, or, more to the point, that similar policies will be desirable in the future. It provides no direct way to address other concerns, such as financial stability, which most people will agree should, in light of recent events, figure more prominently in monetary-policy decisions.

Must-read: Paul Krugman: “Strangely Self-Confident Permahawks”

Must-Read: Paul Krugman: Strangely Self-Confident Permahawks: “An odd thing about permahawks…

…They are, by and large, free-market acolytes who insist that markets know best; yet they also insist that we ignore financial markets that have been telling us that inflation is quiescent and the U.S. government is solvent…. It’s OK to conclude that markets are currently wrong, although if you believe that they make huge errors that should influence your views on policy in general. But your confidence in your dismissal of market beliefs should bear some relationship to your own track record. If you’ve been warning about inflation, wrongly, for six or so years, and markets current show no worries about inflation… I would expect some diffidence….

But I’m not Martin Feldstein.


Marty Feldstein: A Federal Reserve Oblivious to Its Effect on Financial Markets: “The sharp fall in share prices last week was a reminder of the vulnerabilities created by years of unconventional monetary policy…

…t was inevitable that the artificially high prices of U.S. stocks would eventually decline. Even after last week’s market fall, the S&P 500 stock index remains 30% above its historical average. There is no reason to think the correction is finished. The overpriced share values are a direct result of the Federal Reserve’s quantitative easing (QE) policy…. The strategy worked well. Share prices jumped 30% in 2013 alone and house prices rose 13% in that year. The resulting rise in wealth increased consumer spending, leading to higher GDP and lower unemployment. But excessively low interest rates have caused investors and lenders, in their reach for yield, to accept excessive risks…. As the Fed normalizes interest rates these prices will fall. It is difficult to know if this will cause widespread financial and economic declines like those seen in 2008. But the persistence of very low interest rates contributes to that systemic risk and to the possibility of economic instability….

Moreover, the Fed is planning a path for short-term interest rates that is likely to raise the rate of inflation too rapidly…. The danger is that very low interest rates in this environment would lead to a higher rate of inflation and higher long-term rates. The Fed could prevent that faster rise in inflation by increasing the federal-funds rate more rapidly this year and next. Fed officials also make the case that stimulating the economy by continued monetary ease is desirable as protection against a possible negative shock—such as a sharp fall in exports or in construction—that could push the economy into a new recession. That strategy involves unnecessary risks of financial instability. There are alternative tax and spending policies that could provide a safer way to maintain aggregate demand if there is a negative shock. The Fed needs to recognize that its employment goals have essentially been reached and that the inflation rate will reach its target of 2% in the foreseeable future. The economy would be better served by a more rapid normalization of short-term interest rates.

Must-read: Narayana Kocherlakota: “Information in Inflation Breakevens about Fed Credibility”

Graph 5 Year 5 Year Forward Inflation Expectation Rate FRED St Louis Fed

Must-Read: Narayana Kocherlakota: Information in Inflation Breakevens about Fed Credibility: “The ten-year breakeven refers to the difference in yields between a standard (nominal) 10-year Treasury and an inflation-protected 10-year Treasury (called TIPS)…

…The five-year breakeven is the same thing, except that it’s over five years…. The five-year five-year forward breakeven is defined to be the difference between the 10-year breakeven and the five-year breakeven… shaped by beliefs about inflation over a five year horizon that starts five years from now… conceptually… the sum of… 1. investors’ best forecast about what inflation will average 5 to 10 years from now, [and] 2. the inflation risk premium over a horizon five to ten years from now…. My own assessment is that both components have declined. But my main point will be a decline in either component is a troubling signal about FOMC credibility.  

It is well-understood why a decline in the first component should be seen as problematic for FOMC credibility. The FOMC has pledged to deliver 2% inflation over the long run…. A decline in the first component of breakevens signals a decline in this form of credibility…. A decline in the inflation risk premium means that investors… increasingly see standard Treasuries as being a better hedge…. But Treasuries are only a better hedge than TIPs against macroeconomic risk if inflation turns out to be low when economic activity turns out to be low…. [Thus] a decline in the inflation risk premium… reflects investors’ assigning increasing probability to a scenario in which inflation is low over an extended period at the same time that employment is low….

In the world of policymaking, no signal comes without noise.  But the risks for monetary policymakers associated with a slippage in the inflation anchor are considerable.   Given these risks, I do believe that it would be wise for the Committee to be responsive to the ongoing decline in inflation breakevens by reversing course on its current tightening path.

Must-read: Barry Eichengreen: “Reforming or Deforming the Fed?”

Must-Read: Barry Eichengreen: Reforming or Deforming the Fed?: “We have proposals by Republican candidates Ted Cruz, Rand Paul, and Mike Huckabee…

…to require the Fed to maintain a fixed dollar price of gold. To call these actual proposals is a bit generous…. [Would] the Fed… be obliged to provide gold at this price to all… as before 1933, or only to foreign governments, as between 1945 and 1971….[Could] that obligation could be suspended in an emergency, as in those earlier eras[?] More fundamentally, they fail to… clarify why the Fed should focus on stabilizing the price of this particular metal, rather than on the price of a representative basket of goods and services. Indeed, if the critics focused on the latter, they could give their proposal a name. They could call it ‘inflation targeting.’

Must-read: Douglas Staiger, James H. Stock, and Mark W. Watson (1997): “The NAIRU, Unemployment and Monetary Policy”

Douglas Staiger, James H. Stock, and Mark W. Watson (1997): The NAIRU, Unemployment and Monetary Policy: “This paper examines the precision of conventional estimates of the NAIRU…

…and the role of the NAIRU and unemployment in forecasting inflation. The authors find that, although there is a clear empirical Phillips relation, the NAIRU is imprecisely estimated, forecasts of inflation are insensitive to the NAIRU, and there are other leading indicators of inflation that are at least as good as unemployment. This suggests deemphasizing the NAIRU in public discourse about monetary policy and instead drawing on a richer variety of leading indicators of inflation.

Must-read: Martin Sandbu: “Free Lunch: On Models and Making Policy”

Must-Read: Superb from the extremely sharp Martin Sandbu! Only three quibbles:

  1. There are indeed “three great economists” in the mix here, but their names are Summers, Krugman, and Blanchard…
  2. This isn’t really a conversation that would have taken place even in an academic setting. If I have ever been in the same room at the same time with Larry, Paul, and Olivier–let alone all of Olivier’s coauthors, Michael Woodford, Danny Vinit, and Lukasz Rachel and Thomas Smith–I cannot remember it. And discussions and exchanges in scholarly journal articles are formal and rigid in an unhelpful way.
  3. Do note that Keynes was on Summers’s side with respect to the importance of maintaining business confidence: cf.: General Theory, ch. 12, “The State of Long-Term Expectation”

Martin Sandbu: Free Lunch: On Models and Making Policy: “The internet has… open[ed] up to the public…

…discussions… that previously took place mostly in face-to-face gatherings or scholarly journal articles. Neither medium was particularly accessible….

Summers posted a characteristically succinct statement on why he disagreed with the Federal Reserve’s decision to begin tightening… His analysis is well worth reading in full, but the trigger of the ensuing debate was his explanation for why the Fed thinks differently: ‘I suspect it is because of an excessive commitment to existing models and modes of thought. Usually it takes disaster to shatter orthodoxy.’… DeLong expressed doubts that the Fed’s analysis was indeed compatible with existing models; Krugman asserted that conventional models straightforwardly showed the Fed to be in the wrong, and that… policy was driven… by… ‘a conviction that you and your colleagues know more than is in the textbooks’….

Summers then responded… showed a fascinating divergence…. DeLong and Krugman think the Fed erred by ignoring… models…. Summers thinks the Fed erred by ignoring things that such models do not capture…. Summers is also much more comfortable with the notion that policymakers should aim to underpin market confidence. That notion has often been derided by Krugman…. Two quotes rather nicely capture the methodological disagreement here. Summers writes: ‘I think maintaining confidence is an important part of the art of policy…. Paul is certainly correct in his model but I doubt that he is in fact.’ DeLong responds: ‘Larry, however, says: We know things that are not in the model. Those things make Paul’s claim wrong. My problem with Larry is that I am not sure what those things are.’…

What is a policymaker to do if she thinks this is the case in reality, even if no extant model captures it? Surely not wait for 30 years in the hope that new mathematical techniques enable economists to model that reality. In his willingness to listen to those who may have an untheoretical ‘feel’ for the market, and in his intellectual respect for the limits of his own knowledge, Summers comes across as the most Keynesian of these three…

Brad DeLong and Jan Hatzius on the macroeconomic situation

An interview I did last fall with Jan Hatzius:

Brad DeLong is a professor of economics at UC Berkeley, where his research focuses on financial crises and 20th century macroeconomics, as well as the political economy of monetary and fiscal policy. He has taught at Harvard University and served as Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Economic Policy under the Clinton Administration. Below, he and Goldman Sachs Chief Economist Jan Hatzius discuss risks around liftoff and the structural downshift in rates.

The views stated by Brad DeLong herein are those of the interviewee, and do not necessarily reflect those of Goldman Sachs:

Allison Nathan: Has the US economy recovered from the Great Recession?

Brad DeLong: Yes and no.

It has not recovered from the large loss in productivity and potential output. The Great Recession knocked down our level of output by 8% compared to where we thought it would be now in 2007. We will probably never recover that loss. That is very unusual for the United States, which had a substantial recovery in lost output even after the Great Depression.

But as far as the labor market, we have mostly recovered–but not fully recovered.

Jan Hatzius: I believe that the labor market is mostly recovered and that the overall economy has come a long way toward recovery. To Brad’s point about disappointing output, the question is how much of that is exogenous weakness versus some form of hysteresis, with the effects of the Great Recession weighing progressively on economic activity. It’s difficult to know the answer, but I’ve become more sympathetic to the idea that we underestimated the extent of the exogenous slowdown. We’ve substantially revised our views on potential growth, and I don’t think it is all or even mostly due to the aftereffects of the Great Recession.

Allison Nathan: Has the time come to raise rates?

Jan Hatzius: Given how far the funds rate is below normal, how close the economy is to full employment, and my expectation of gradual increases in wage and price inflation, now seems like an appropriate time to move. But I would say there is still a good case for waiting on risk-management grounds because the future of the economy is uncertain. It seems more dangerous to lift off too early and find that the economy can’t tolerate tighter policy than to end up a bit high on inflation for a while. That said, I feel less strongly about the risk-management case than I did three or six months ago.

Brad DeLong: There are four reasons why it is not yet time to begin normalizing monetary policy.

First, we are only 300bp away from the equilibrium funds rate. Given how close we are, why not just wait until we get to full employment?

Second, there is an unknown amount of slack left, and it might be substantial.

Third, to Jan’s point on risk management, I think there’s a 50% chance that the Federal Reserve will be really sorry that it raised rates when it did. And there is no upside for proceeding with rate hikes now. The Fed could delay hikes another six months and then just raise them faster and still get to the same place. But if it raises rates now, it will have no way to catch up because rates would presumably still be very low.

Finally, we are likely to find ourselves at the zero lower bound sometime in the future again—and when we do, we want market participants to feel very certain that there will be overshooting coming out of it—more inflation and lower real interest rates over the medium term that will boost growth. We need a reputation of coming off of the zero lower bound with a roaring economy, and I believe we need to stay at zero longer for that to happen.

Allison Nathan: Why isn’t the Fed more concerned about the lack of inflation, and should it be?

Brad DeLong: Janet Yellen and Stanley Fischer really believe in their models, which predict that inflation will rise to and above 2% a year in 2017 and 2018. They see this inflation path as a tangible reality, but it is in fact only a shadow cast by their assumptions. The Fed should be much more concerned about model uncertainty and, in turn, the lack of inflation right now.

Jan Hatzius: I have a slightly more positive view on inflation. My approach is “trust but verify,” which Ronald Reagan used to say on arms control negotiations. I trust the inflation models more than Brad does, but I’d like to see more verification in terms of the numbers picking up. A recent pick-up in wage growth is somewhat encouraging; our broad measurement of wage growth has risen to 2.6% yoy—still low but the highest rate we’ve seen in the recovery. We’re only at 1.3% for core PCE, but that is roughly what we expected at the start of the year, not a downside surprise, which would be more worrying.

Allison Nathan: Do you worry about financial imbalances?

Jan Hatzius: Not really. Asset markets don’t look particularly frothy to me today, debt growth is reasonably muted, and the private sector is still running a decent financial surplus of a little over 2% of GDP. So I just don’t see sources of worries over financial imbalances in the United States. But there are certainly other places around the world that show greater cause for concern, China being among them.

Brad DeLong: I generally agree. The aggregate numbers don’t seem to suggest anything like the troubling financial imbalances we have seen in the past. People worried about imbalances today tend to say that their concern centers on who is bearing risk in the economy or the markets, especially given that risk-bearing capacity on Wall Street has declined and that low interest rates have continued to generate a “search for yield.” But we don’t have the data to know how many people are unprepared to bear the risks associated with their positions.

Allison Nathan: Given current excess liquidity, will the Fed be successful in actually lifting the fed funds rate?

Brad DeLong: Yes. It will be very interesting to see what it has to do to be successful. But if the Fed wants the rate to get somewhere, it will get it there.

Jan Hatzius: Agreed.

Allison Nathan: Where will the Fed’s communication from the December meeting leave market expectations for future rate hikes?

Jan Hatzius: Markets will think that January is firmly off the table, and that March will be on the table if the data cooperates. The probability for March now priced into the market is roughly 50%, and my guess is that this will rise, but probably not above 60-70%. How exactly the Fed gets the market there is a bit of a dance. They will emphasize data-dependence, but the idea of March being a real possibility could cause a tightening of financial conditions and set expectations for hiking at every meeting, which the Fed wants to avoid. But I think they’ll find a way to manage this.

Brad DeLong: I agree they will emphasize data dependence and the need to assess the effects of the first hike, which is likely to push expectations to March at the earliest.

Allison Nathan: In the last few rate-hike cycles, the fed funds rate rose faster and ended up higher than the Fed initially projected. Will this time be different?

Brad DeLong: This time will be different, because in all recent hiking cycles, the Fed started out well behind the curve.

In the mid-2000s, the Fed was unhappy that its short-term rate increases were having so little traction on the long end of the bond curve, which led them to hike more rapidly than they initially intended.

In 1994, the tightening cycle began after Alan Greenspan had cut Bill Clinton slack for an entire year to get deficit reduction accomplished, so Greenspan was very eager to start raising interest rates once the Fed actually began to hike.

In 1989, Greenspan had delayed hikes out of fear that stock market crash in October 1987 would cause a recession. It didn’t, so the Fed ended up needing to catch up to where it thought it should be.

And before then, Paul Volcker definitely believed that the Fed was far behind the curve at the end of the 1970s when he became Fed Chair.

Given this pattern of the past four major tightening cycles, this time really is different.

Jan Hatzius: This time should be different, but the market is priced for something too different. If the recent trends continue, we will be at full employment by the end next year and inflation and wage growth will also likely be higher. In that environment, I don’t see the Fed taking a six-month break. I see them hiking a quarter-point every quarter, which is twice as much as what the market currently expects.

Allison Nathan: What’s the risk that the Fed will need to return to more accommodative policy?

Jan Hatzius: I’d give it a roughly 15% probability, which is not insignificant and still a good reason to delay, or at least to go more slowly and be very responsive to new information about the economy, especially in the early days of the normalization process. You could call that a second-best approach to delaying liftoff, but I do think that is where they are now. I see the odds of a shallower path than projected by the dots, but not an outright reversal, as higher, roughly in the 30% range.

Brad DeLong: I think there’s a greater than 50% chance that the rate path will be shallower than the current dots. I see a roughly 50% chance the Fed will end up wishing that they had stuck at zero or at least hiked even more gradually than what the market is currently expecting, but I am not sure they would actually dare reverse course. I could see them staying at 1% for a while, wishing they hadn’t hiked but not daring to go back.

Allison Nathan: Will the ECB and BOJ be less likely to ease further once the Fed lifts off?

Jan Hatzius: The extent to which the Fed, ECB, and BOJ are driven by each other gets very overplayed in the market. These are all economies with flexible exchange rates, and foreign monetary policy decisions almost always have offsetting effects on their own desires to move in one direction or another. For example, if the Fed tightens and that leads to a stronger dollar and a weaker US economy, the implications for the ECB are pretty ambiguous. So I don’t see a big spillover, and it is very hard to prove any such spillover empirically.

Brad DeLong: I agree that internal monetary politics are overwhelmingly primary in both the Euro area and Japan. What the Fed does is only very small noise compared to their focus on their own political-economic configuration. The only places in the developed world where monetary policy is tightly linked to the Fed are Britain and Canada.

Allison Nathan: Where will rates end up in this cycle?

Brad DeLong: There has been a structural downshift in rates. A decade ago, we wondered if rates would end up at 6%; a decade before that, it was 8%. Now, virtually everyone would be surprised if they ended above 4%. I’m more pessimistic than most in that I see them most likely to end at 3% or below, with a fairly small chance they’ll end up higher and a one-in-three chance that in retrospect we won’t really see this as a tightening cycle at all because rates will be in the 0-1% range three or four years down the road.

The primary factor behind my relatively pessimistic view is people’s loss of confidence in the capacity to bear and understand risk, and in the idea that large downward movements in asset prices are once-in-a-generation episodes like the Great Depression. In the 2000s, we suddenly had three episodes: the bursting of the dotcom bubble, the US real estate collapse, and the 2008-2009 equity and risky debt market crash, with the most sophisticated players blindsided by one or two if not all three of those events. This eroded confidence, widening the risk spreads between safe and risky assets.

Jan Hatzius: I forecast the terminal rate at 1-2% in real terms and 3-4% in nominal terms, which puts me on the slightly more optimistic side of this debate. In my view, the labor market is a much better indicator of cyclical progress than real GDP, especially in an environment where potential growth has slowed. And I am struck by the amount of labor market improvement we’ve seen. So I do think rates will end substantially higher from here.