SMP: More Insights from the Cato Monetary Conference

In this post I would like to briefly comment on three points raised by J. B. Taylor, George Selgin, and Scott Sumner. Though these points have been raised before, they are worth reviewing.

  1. B. Taylor delivered his lecture on the challenges of monetary policy in an international context. The first challenge, of course, is that the strategy, or policy decisions, of a major central bank affects the decision making of other major central banks. This could result in an unintended loose policy at the international level as central banks around the world react to an expansionary policy by a major central bank, like the Federal Reserve. Say, for instance, that after 2001 the Fed would have decided to reduce the federal funds rate target and expand monetary supply. Because of these, a major trade partner, say China, decides to peg it exchange rate with the U.S. dollar to avoid the effects on its trade with the U.S. To do this, China needs to mimic the Fed’s policy. The international effects of Fed’s policy are certainly significant. The two largest crises in Latin America happened after the two largest deviations by the Fed from Taylor’s rule (here). But to be conscious of these issues does not mean the solution is easy. Leith and Wren-Lewin (2009) show that when assuming open economies, the Taylor rule may be indeterminate or produce spill over to other economies.

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SMP: Cato Monetary Conference: a reflection on James Bullard

Post en Sound Money Project comentando sobre la presentación de James Bullard durante la 33rd Cato Monetary Conference.

Last Tuesday, the 33rd annual Cato Monetary Conference was held at the Cato Institute in Washington, DC. There, brilliant minds met and presented on various interesting topics. I will briefly comment on some of them in another post, but for now would like to offer a short reflection on the first keynote address by James Bullard, President and CEO of the Federal Reserve of Bank of St. Louis.

First, Bullard gave two reasons why the FOMC might decide to increase the Federal funds rate target: 1) the unemployment rate might be close to it’s natural (equilibrium) level and 2) the inflation rate is around 1.7% (close to the 2% Fed’s target). Of course, there are still reasons that the Fed might keep the Federal funds rate at the same level. One reason might be the impact of the fall in labor participation on the unemployment rate. A fall in the price of financial assets a few weeks ago might raise the concern that a rise in interest rates may negatively affect the balance sheets of financial institutions. I previously commented on that here. In short while a rise in Federal funds rate target is not unlikely, I wouldn’t be surprised if no changes occur.

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SMP: Prudential banking versus real bills doctrine

¿Deben los bancos comerciales seguir la real bills doctrine? Breve comentario en Sound Money Project sobre el intercambio entre J. R. Rallo y Larry White.

So what then is a real bill? A real bill is a bill that is backed by a real good. If I produce bread, for instance, then as a producer I can issue a bill payable on a date after I expect to have sold the bread, which is still under production. Banks, under such a doctrine, should then constrain themselves to invest in this type of bills. In so doing, they would only offer credit to real market activities.

Following a recent interview, Juan R. Rallo and Lawrence H. White engaged in an interesting exchange about this issue (see here, here, and here.) Rallo argues that the RBD is a prudential banking policy- in short, that banks under free banking should follow a version of the RBD to maintain monetary stability or, more precisely, to avoid discoordination by borrowing short and lending long. This is problematic, the argument goes, because the market loses liquidity: one bank can gain liquidity by selling a long-term mortgage, for instance, at the expense of someone else losing liquidity as well.

Let me offer a few critical comments to what is my best understating of what is being argued.

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SMP: Financial bubbles and macroprudential policy

Columna en SMP sobre política monetaria y burbujas financieras.

In the field of monetary policy, there is one question that must necessarily be addressed: what should a central bank do in light of a financial bubble? Should it try to burst the bubble as soon as it arises or engage in damage control after a financial crisis occurs?

Personally, I don’t think that there is any one answer to this question- it would depend on too many variables. But there’s one solution that central bankers might consider: not creating bubbles in the first place. After all, bubbles don’t fall from the sky: for financial bubbles to occur, monetary policy must deviate from monetary equilibrium

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SMP: Rising interest rates: The Fed vs the Treasury?

Hace unos días la Reserva Federal decidió mantener las tasas de interés sin cambios. Pero hasta hace una semanas se especulaba con un aumento de tasas (incluso según pronunciamientos de la Fed).

En este post en SMP comento sobre tres posibles razones por las cuales la Fed puede haber decidido seguir manteniendo las tasas de interés en mínimos históricos.

In its latest meeting, the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) decided to not increase the Federal funds rate target, extending the lower zero bound policy until at least their next meeting. Although the decision was not unexpectable, some people did find it a bit surprising. The post 2008 recovery has been one of the slower ones in U.S. history and its fair to say that if it were possible, the Fed would likely push interest rates below zero percent.

The unemployment rate has decreased from 10 percent in 2009 to close to 5 percent today. The core-CPI inflation rate, though not showing an upward trend, does depict values close to 2 percent (between 1.70 and 1.80 percent) on a yearly basis. It would seem, then, that the Fed is concerned with more than just unemployment and inflation, its mandated responsibilities. Three key issues come to mind.

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SMP: Essay Contest and Research Grants

El Sound Money Project anuncia su essay contest y un programa de research grants destinados al estudio de moneda sana y estable.

El essay contest tienen dos categorías, una para alumnos y otra para profesores/profesionales.

Acceder a la información del essay contest [deadline: 15 de noviembre]

Acceder a la información del research grants [deadline: 15 de septiembre]

SMP: Why Free Banking?

En Sound Money Project ofrezco un breve comentario de por qué estudiar banca libre, un sistema monetario que ya no existe.

The need for and convenience of a central bank are usually taken for granted. To say that a central bank is a good institution and, therefore, needed, is not enough. Unfortunately, the assumption that central banks are necessary seems to weigh more heavily than the facts that suggest otherwise.

Good and bad are relative terms. With respect to what then is a central bank good? Some might say to the absence of a central bank- or more specifically, to the presence of a free banking regime.

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SMP: Should Central Banks Target NGDP?

El último fin de semana de Abril tuvo lugar en el Center for Free Enterprise en West Virginia University una conferencia sobre si los bancos centrales deben tener metas de ingreso nominal.

En este post del SMP resumo la conferencia y algunas de las presentaciones.

That was the topic of a conference organized by the Center for Free Enterprise at West Virginia University that took place on Saturday, April 25. The conference was divided in two sessions: one where theoretical aspects of NGDP were discussed and another that took a more empirical approach to the matter. I presented in the second session on how to spot if NGDP targeting is, in fact, too loose.

Besides the presence of Scott Sumner, probably the best known proponent of NGDP targeting, other presenters included Thomas Hogan, Alexander W. Salter, Ryan Murphy, Joshua Hendrickson, Robert Lester, and Vipin Veetil. While all papers endorsed NGDP targeting in one way or another, at least as a superior norm to other principles such as price stability or the Taylor rule (Hendrickson and Lester), the papers also focused on either if this holds under a free banking system (Salter) or if the rule could put the economy in an inferior equilibrium (Hogan). Even though I found all presentations interesting, I’ll briefly comment on just two of them.

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SMP: The Great Stagnation

Post en Sound Money Project sobre los comentarios de Ben Bernanke respecto a la tesis de la Great Stagnation

Ben Bernanke, now at Brookings Institute, has a new blog where he has been discussing low interest rates and the problem of secular stagnation. Great stagnation occurs when there are plenty of savings, but not investment options. Therefore, savings are not invested, aggregate demand weakens, and the economy stagnates.

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SMP: No, the interest rate is not the price of money

Comentario en el SMP sobre la confusión de que la tasa de interés es el precio del dinero. También con algún insight de donde proviene este error en el sistema keynesiano.

The notion that the interest rate is the price of money is seriously misled. As I move forward with my lectures on the Keynesian system, this is something that I want to make clear to my students. Certainly, when evaluating the Keynesian model, we need to understand what the model says (and what it does not say), but unfortunately, textbooks do not always tackle controversial issues. This is an example of the perpetuation of errors and misconceptions by textbooks. To see this for yourself, simply open a random macroeconomics textbook and read what it has to say about the classical economists– then, open a book actually written by a classical economist and compare what the two have to say.

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