Sunday, August 29, 2010

New Ideas about Monetary Policy from Jackson Hole

I write from Jackson Hole Wyoming as the early morning sun shines sharply on the Grand Tetons where I just spent a very enjoyable few days at the annual monetary conference. I have been coming to these Jackson Hole conferences on and off since the first one on monetary policy in 1982, and as usual I learned a lot. Here is a brief sampling. I recommend reading the papers and the commentary once they are posted by the Kansas City Fed.

The main thing I took away from Ben Bernanke’s opener (the tradition going back to Paul Volcker and Alan Greenspan is for the Fed chair to lead off) was his call for a “cost-benefit” approach to determine whether another dose of unorthodox large scale asset purchases is needed. This is a big improvement over a “whatever it takes” approach, and it opens the door to a transparent discussion of the costs and benefits of such policies. My own view (based on research with Johannes Stroebel) is that the benefits in terms of lower rates are very small, while the short-term costs of greater uncertainty about the exit strategy and long-term costs from a loss of independence are large.

Larry Christiano presented a new and interesting modification of the Taylor rule which replaces the output gap with a measure of credit growth. He presented some preliminary model simulation work to see how his idea would work in practice. Given the measurement problems with the output gap, more research along these lines would be valuable. Milton Friedman once proposed that I consider replacing the output gap with money growth (M2) in the Taylor rule, which is a similar proposal.

Jim Stock and Mark Watson presented a novel model for inflation forecasting. It focuses entirely on the statistical regularity that inflation declines during recessions. Most important for the current economic situation was their finding that the chances of deflation are quite low right now.

Alan Blinder and I presented our separate critiques of Bank of England Deputy Governor Charlie Bean’s ideas for future monetary policy. Charlie started off by revisiting the critique I presented at the 2007 Jackson Hole conference that policy rates were too low for too long leading up to the crisis; he mentioned recent work by Ben Bernanke, but omitted other papers which I brought to people's attention. I was surprised that Charlie placed so much emphasis on studies of Fed asset purchases which simply looked at announcement effects, recalling my experience running the international division at Treasury where announcement effects in the currency markets are usually offset soon afterwards. Alan Blinder argued for a more discretionary and interventionist approach, buying more assets including private sector assets. I stressed the benefits of getting back to the rules-based Framework that Works, which is how I labeled the policy that was used effectively for most of the 1980s and 1990s. Here is my commentary. Read Alan’s when it is posted. This debate will continue.

Throughout the conference the growing U.S. government debt problem was the gigantic elephant in the room. Eric Leeper’s dramatic exploding debt charts and his plea for a more scientific approach to fiscal policy analysis made this problem crystal clear for everyone, even though public finance economists in the audience vigorously defended their approach. This debate will also continue.

Monday, August 23, 2010

The Russian Export Ban: An Economic Story Worth Telling

The Soviet Union used to provide me with plenty of current event stories to tell students in Economics 1 about the wastes and harms of price controls and central planning. But most first-year college students taking introductory economics this fall were born after the collapse of the Soviet Union. Those good old stories are far from students’ personal memory and are certainly not current events.

That’s why I was so interested in Paul Gregory's recent blog about this summer’s grain export ban in Russia. It’s a current event well worth telling students about. After the damage from the heat to Russia’s grain crop, Prime Minister Putin imposed a ban on grain exports. But as Paul Gregory shows the reason the story is worth telling is that Russia is now an exporter of grain. In contrast the Soviet Union actually had to import grain from the United States and other countries, because of the inefficiency of the collective farms and misallocation of resources under central planning. Recall that President Carter put an embargo on U.S. exports of grain to the Soviet Union, using it as a lever to get the Soviet’s to leave Afghanistan.

In the years before the Russian Revolution, Russia was an exporter of grains. Ukraine was considered the breadbasket of Europe. Now after the collapse of the Soviet Union, Russia and the Ukraine are exporting again. So this fall the inefficiencies of central planning in the Soviet Union can be explained with a current event after all.

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Washington Consensus Versus Beijing Consensus on Economic Policy

Does China’s remarkable economic growth, its stability during the recent financial crisis, and its immense foreign aid/investment in Africa raise doubts about free market policies and provide evidence in favor of a more interventionist approach? In a new review paper, my colleague Ronald McKinnon says “Surprisingly no.” In fact, while many tout a "third way," China has followed quite closely the 10 liberal market-oriented rules commonly called the Washington Consensus after John Williamson wrote them down 20 years ago. McKinnon convincingly shows that “The Chinese economy itself has evolved step-by-step…into one that can be reasonably described by Williamson’s 10 rules!”

Some experts worry that U.S. influence is waning relative to China, and there is cause for worry, but McKinnon argues that “U.S. influence…can be largely recouped if its government returns to a hard version of its own 'Washington Consensus'— as China has done."

McKinnon also offers a fascinating political/economic analysis and explanation for China’s rapidly growing economic involvement in Africa.

Thursday, August 12, 2010

Where Are We Now, Three Years After the Onset of the Crisis?

This week marks the third anniversary of the flare up of the financial crisis in August 2007. Howard Green, Headline anchor at the Business News Network in Canada, broadcast the news this way in today’s lead-in to an interview with me to mark the occasion: “It was exactly three years ago this week, August 2007, when the global financial system started experiencing chest pains as credit conditions tightened…It would still be a year and a bit before financial markets would go into cardiac arrest…Where are we now, three years after the onset of the crisis?”

The chart below shows how things looked back then; it's like a “money market EKG,” called LOIS3 (the spread between three-month LIBOR and OIS, the market’s expectation of the federal funds rate over the same three months). The last reading is on Friday, August 10, 2007 and is what you would have seen if you looked at your computer screen on Sunday August 12 and tried to figure out what would happen next. Yes, there’s obvious evidence of chest pains, perhaps even worse.

But “what’s causing them” was the question everyone was asking. “What’s the diagnosis?” I have argued that the problem was misdiagnosed, and thereby mistreated, by policy makers, and that is why the patient eventually went into “cardiac arrest” a year or so later, though some still say that the treatment was correct and things would have been even worse without the treatment. If you want to see what the “money market EKG” looked like at the time of “cardiac arrest,” take a look at this nice interactive chart on Bloomberg.

Unfortunately the answer to Howard Green’s question above is that we are still in a pretty dire situation. We are now going into the fourth year of “crisis-recession-fizzled recovery” and for several reasons the outlook is bleak unless policy is changed as I had the chance to explain in the TV interview, divided into segments One, Two, and Three.

Sunday, August 8, 2010

The Ryan Roadmap versus the Road to Ruin

Congressman Paul Ryan’s Roadmap has suddenly become the focal point for debating how America should get its economic house in order. Fred Barnes of the Weekly Standard says to embrace it. Paul Krugman of the New York Times says to reject it. And all the pundits are predicting what the plan would do, including Krugman who says it “calls for steep cuts in both spending and taxes.” So how are you going to decide? I suggest that you read the plan.
It’s only 87 pages long--about the same length as a good book on the economic crisis--and there are some great charts.

I put together some charts to get started. In these charts I compare the Ryan Roadmap with the road America is currently on, according the CBO’s latest estimate of June 30, 2010. CBO calls the current road the Alternative Fiscal Scenario. Road to Ruin is a better description.

The first chart compares federal debt as a share of GDP under the CBO Alternative with the Roadmap; the Roadmap obviously makes more sense. The second chart shows spending and taxes under the Roadmap and the CBO Alternative; the Ryan Roadmap focuses on controlling the growth of spending as a share of GDP, which makes sense because that is where the growth of the deficit is coming from. The third and fourth charts show how the Ryan Roadmap takes action to control non-interest spending now and thereby dramatically reduces interest payments on the debt in the future.

There are alternative plans of course, but at the very least the facts shown in these charts demonstarte that the Ryan Roadmap is a big improvement over the road we are on now.