Friday, February 06, 2009

Time for a Price Level Target, and a Damned High One!

If you believe in a NAIRU, or anything remotely like a NAIRU or an accelerationist Phillips curve, the prognosis for prices is looking increasingly ugly. For those who believe confidently in such a Phillips curve and accept historical estimates of the parameters, deflation is now a certainty, and severe deflation is a strong possibility. Even among those who don't believe in a Phillips curve, deflation should be considered at least a serious possibility, and the danger of a deflationary spiral should not be ignored.

It's time to stop worrying about policies that "may cause inflation in the long run" and to embrace such policies specifically because they may -- and hopefully will -- cause inflation. Markets are desperately in need of "shock and awe," and the Fed can provide that shock by setting a long-run price level target much higher than anything previously considered reasonable. I would recommend a target representing an average rate of inflation of 6% over the next 5 years and 5% over the subsequent 5 years. The Fed could also set longer range price targets that represent lower inflation rates thereafter (assuming the earlier targets are achieved): say 4% from 2019 to 2024 and 3% thereafter. (Experience has now made clear that 2% was too low -- too close to zero -- for a long-run target during normal times.)

The point of using price level targets is that, the worse things get, the more inflation the Fed will promise for the future. And the more inflation it promises for the future (assuming markets believe those promises), the lower will be longer term real interest rates at any give level of nominal rates. If the Fed can induce such an expectation, it will then be able to provide a more dramatic stimulus at just the right time by setting real rates that are significantly negative. (If necessary, the Fed can set longer-term real rates by buying sufficient quantities of longer term securities, or by having the Treasury retire such securities.)

Again, "dangerous policies" that "may be highly inflationary in the long run" are just the policies that our leaders should be embracing at this moment, precisely because those policies may -- and hopefully will -- be inflationary in the long run. So if the Fed buys lower quality securities on which it risks having to take losses, let it say, "It is our great hope, in the event that economic weakness prevents the price level from approaching our target, that we may have the opportunity to take large losses on these securities and to make up those losses by creating more base money. Only by taking such losses can we implement the 'helicopter drop' that may be necessary." And if the Fed should expand the monetary base dramatically in the hope of encouraging bank lending, and detractors should argue that this policy is reckless because the Fed will need to withdraw that money later to prevent inflation and may not be willing to do so, let the Fed respond, "It is not our intention to withdraw that money later, unless the price level should threaten to rise significantly above our target. Should the inflation rate over the next few years prove too low, it is our intention to resist steadfastly any pressure to avoid the very high inflation rates that will then be necessary to achieve our target."

Let's be quite clear about the arithmetic here. If the average inflation rate over the next 5 years should be zero -- which in the absence of policies such as those I advocate above, would be a very reasonable forecast, and in the presence of such policies would still not be an unreasonable one -- the Fed will of course miss its 5-year target by a dramatic margin. But the 10-year target will remain. The arithmetic would then require an 11% inflation rate over those next 5 years, in order to meet that target. That is the promise that the Fed must make for the future in order to achieve the vital goal of producing very low real interest rates today. And as for those who say that 11% is too much, even if they be 99% of the population, to my mind they are all traitors, enemies of the United States and of the world, and if I had my way, they would all be hanged!

Their intentions are good, perhaps, but we must not let such foolishness lead us down the road to Hell.

73 comments:

  1. So glad to see you posting again. I always love your thoughts, and by the way you've made a lot of great calls.

    Taking a cue from one of your previous posts, one could argue (and I presume you would) that the Fed actually *protects* the US credit rating by way of a significant inflation target, b/c our ability to repay debt via taxes is much improved. At the same time, however, in my naievete I assume that as expected inflation rises, so will nominal interest rates, especially at the long end of the curve. Do you have a view on why that *won't* happen, or is the point that it is not the most important issue?

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  2. Nominal rates won't rise because the Fed won't let them (unless the price level starts to approach the target). In principle, if there are no buyers for T-notes at the Fed's target yield, then the Fed can buy up the entire national debt if it has to.

    If it did so, then the only "safe" asset left would be money, and the safe return would be -6% (at first, and it would become more negative over time if we don't make sufficient progress toward the target price level).

    Of course, even money isn't really safe: realistically, -6% is a lower bound, since the Fed may not able to achieve 6% inflation, but it can probably avoid higher inflation. Presumably as the horizon increases, confidence in the Fed's ability to produce inflation would increase, so "10-year money" would be fairly safe, with an annual return of around -5%, give or take a percentage point.

    So in the extreme case where the Fed has to buy the entire national debt and still can't get a high enough bid on T-notes (or T-bonds), you end up with an almost safe asset yielding around -5%. In that circumstance, private debt would start to look attractive, if it could promise (even with some default risk) any reasonable real yield, and with 5-6% inflation, it shouldn't be too hard for businesses to promise high nominal returns. (A real return of zero, which shouldn't be too hard to make, would already be a hugely better return than the "safe" asset.)

    ReplyDelete
  3. Yes. Agreed. Even an explicit inflation target would be better than nothing, leaving expectations as unanchored as they are now. But a price level path target would be much better. Here was my own kick at the can: http://worthwhile.typepad.com/worthwhile_canadian_initi/2009/01/future-monetary-policy-vs-current-fiscal-policy-pricelevel-path-targeting.html , coming to much the same conclusion.

    I'm disappointed we don't see more advocacy of this policy; all the debate is about fiscal policy instead, but this one is much cheaper, and likely to be just as effective.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Inflation targeting sounds great unless you are a creditor (or saver, much the same thing). Do we have more to fear from a creditors' revolt, i.e., high rates, credit freeze, or from debt deflation wherein the ensuing private defaults would provide the "stress relief" we otherwise seek from inflation targeting?

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  5. While I agree that a sustained period of inflation would be beneficial in that it would be a net transfer of wealth to debtors -- and hence supportive to future consumption -- the level of base money in the system isn't the problem; it's the formation of the larger monetary aggregates that's gotten bunged up. We've seen dramatic growth of M0 over the past year, yet that has been more than compensated by a dramatic lessening in the velocity of money. The post dot-com asset bubble has left us with overcapacity in nearly all sectors and levels of debt service we haven't seen since the 1930s. There is thus little demand for credit, as there is little reason to expand production or acquire assets on leverage. Unless and until our financial institutions are able and willing to risk expanding their balance sheets, we have no need for more base money. Witness the ballooning of excess reserves held at Federal depositories.

    Rather than flood a non-functioning credit system with money that it doesn't fundamentally need, we need to repair the system. On the credit supply side, the financial institutions that have been kept afloat by government support should be placed into receivership, recapitalized, and returned to private hands. On the credit demand side, we need to facilitate mass bankruptcies by businesses and consumers to reduce the overall debt burden in the economy. While a sustained period of 5% inflation would also reduce the debt burden in a similar way, lacking a functional financial system and a demand for credit, it is not presently an option.

    ReplyDelete
  6. "While a sustained period of 5% inflation would also reduce the debt burden in a similar way, lacking a functional financial system and a demand for credit, it is not presently an option."

    My point, though, is that the Fed should promise that, when it does become an option, the Fed will push up the inflation rate even higher to make up for the too-low inflation rate over the next couple of years. That way, even though the next couple of years may have a very low inflation rate, the real long-term interest rate could still be negative, so as to encourage borrowing and investment in productive assets rather than Treasuries.

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  7. Ah, I see. How do you think the Fed and Treasury would best engineer inflation? In the past, periods of significant inflation have been correlated with increasing wages. We've seen the opposite over the last few years: the bulk of new jobs have been low wage service sector positions, and the higher wage jobs -- first manufacturing, now software, accounting, paralegal services, etc -- are moving overseas. Would it be possible to have inflation during a period of high unemployment and flat real wages? A drastically weaker dollar might accomplish that, but the sequelae may well be unimaginable....

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  8. What about the stagflation of the 70s? Isn't the lesson of the 70s that for inflation to be effective at stimulating the economy, it must be short and unexpected? If people believe that inflation will be high for a long time, it just leads to wage/price spirals followed by stagflation.

    Then you need a brutal Volker type recession to wring inflationary expectations out of the economy. That is how it worked in the past anyway.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Inflation depends partly on expectations, so the Fed's announcement could have an immediate effect of raising the inflation rate. But what I had in mind was more that the Fed would be saying, "We know we're not going to be able to get the inflation rate up as high as we want immediately, because there is so much unemployment, but our intention is, first, to bring the economy up to full employment, and then, if necessary, to push the economy beyond full employment, so that the inflation rate will rise enough to make up for the low inflation rates over the next couple of years." Bringing the economy up to full employment in the first place is very difficult starting from where we are now, but it would become much easier once people start to expect inflation, because the negative real interest rates will make investment more attractive.

    Of course, the whole thing really depends on people believing that the Fed can eventually get the inflation rate up. If people believe that it's possible, then it will be possible. But if the Fed can convince people that it is serious about the price level targets, and that it will not abandon them, then people that are holding low-return assets are eventually going to get scared. If the Fed ends up promising a 15% inflation rate (to make up for several years of low inflation rates), even if you're a little bit skeptical about their ability to achieve that, you're going to get worried about holding your assets in the form of cash and Treasury securities.

    In theory, inflation could create long-run problems, like in the 1970's, but part of the idea here is to manage expectations. A large part of the problem in the 1970's was that people had come to expect high inflation. In this case, the Fed will have set specific targets that imply an eventual inflation rate of 3%. So if people believe the targets, the adjustment shouldn't be very difficult.

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  10. I strongly disagree with all this discussion... what would it happen to the bond and stock markets if all of a sudden it priced in a 5% inflation rate? What would be the impact of such repricing to the household wealth and thus consumption? wouldnt it be even more deflationary?
    for me, any price level target at this point would have to be credible, this is the basics of rational expectations... and I believe the FED has lost control over expecations at this point. therefore, they are useless

    ReplyDelete
  11. All other things being equal, a bout of inflation would decrease the debt burden. I agree that it would involve a number of very unfavorable things. First and foremost, an announcement by the Fed that strongly supported a 5% average yearly inflation over the next 5 or 10 years would immediately drive up rates across the yield curve, most markedly on the long end. (At least to the extent that the bond market collectively believed such to be possible.) The follow on effects for asset values and corporate finance would be staggering, and yes, it would cause additional deflation. But that deflation is already cooked in, in a sense: the misallocation of credit, by increasing the risk of eventual default, is latently deflationary. That we don't have a Japanese-style lost decade requires that it be promptly cleansed from the system.

    Our generous foreign creditors might not look kindly on it however. I don't subscribe to the hysteria that China will wholesale dump US sovereign debt, as they have proven to be strategic incrementalists, and until they've grown more domestic demand, they need us as much as we need them. But I wonder, what would be the effect on foreign exchange and dollar hegemony? What kind of political rhetoric would be needed to justify the explicit abandonment of the 'strong dollar' policy, most recently reaffirmed by Geithner at his confirmation hearings? Another way to put that is, since 'inflation' is only slightly less anathema than 'socialism' in US political discourse, what present conditions will it take to allow the discussion to even happen? Another three months like December and January? Another steep descent in equities like October and November?

    Given that S&P 500 earnings are likely to come in negative for 4Q08 (78% reporting at so far -$8 and change) and probably again for 1Q09, we'll probably have another major sell-off before May, with a commensurate flight to Treasuries again. We'll also by then likely have another 1.5 million unemployed and U-3 at 8.3-8.5%. Housing will still be going down. Commercial real estate defaults will be picking up steam. The banks will still be a mess....

    ReplyDelete
  12. We don't really need more investment. We have plenty of factories and computers. What we need now is a dose of consumption, preferably not based on borrowing money that we can not repay.

    One problem with using only monetary policy to address our situation is that expanding our money supply will just increase our trade deficit (not lower the value of the dollar as some have suggested.)

    The world is demanding more dollars and countries will devalue their currencies until they can get the dollars they need to pay their dollar-based needs (either imports or currency reserves.)

    ReplyDelete
  13. Pat:

    First and foremost, an announcement by the Fed that strongly supported a 5% average yearly inflation over the next 5 or 10 years would immediately drive up rates across the yield curve, most markedly on the long end. (At least to the extent that the bond market collectively believed such to be possible.) The follow on effects for asset values and corporate finance would be staggering, and yes, it would cause additional deflation

    It couldn’t drive up rates across the Treasury curve if the Fed were committed to buying enough across the whole curve to keep rates down. (As I said in an earlier comment, the Fed could buy up the entire national debt if that’s what it takes – but I’m guessing that won’t be necessary.) Therefore, the only way it could drive up yields on private debt would be by driving up quality spreads. But why would that happen? If anything, the anticipation of an aggressively inflationary monetary policy should increase the chances that a debtor will be able to repay, and therefore it should reduce quality spreads instead of increasing them.

    So in fact, interest rates would more likely fall even in nominal terms, but they would certainly fall in real terms. Borrowing would become much cheaper. (And potential lenders, such as banks, would effectively be forced to lend, because sitting on idle cash during inflationary times would prove disastrous for them.) We can quibble about what the borrowing would or should be used for – investment, consumption, etc. – but the important thing is that it would be used for something, and that "something" would involve using more of the economy’s resources, and we’d get out of this depression.


    Now, the pursuit of a 5% average inflation rate might not require the Fed to keep nominal Treasury rates down at current levels. Or it might require the Fed to keep them even lower. The Fed would have to do the research to decide where it needs to target those rates. But the point is, the Fed can target Treasury rates at any level it wants. It can put in a standing bid to buy 10-year notes at a 2% yield, or a 3% yield, or a 0% yield, and there is no limit to its ability to buy. So there is no need to worry about driving up interest rates.

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