Categories
Economics

[2622] A large open economy is pretty close to a closed economy

The United States Federal Reserve has come under criticism for its third round of quantitative easing – or QE3 – from many countries, especially emerging ones, who are concerned it will lead to the creation of asset bubbles that will cause problems within their economies.

What will be the effect of this QE3 on Singapore’s economy and how is it likely to affect its people in general?

In QE3, the buying of mortgage-backed securities by the Fed will increase the money supply in the US economy and, given the Fed’s policy of low interest rates, the additional money is intended to spur spending by individuals.

The idea is that this increased spending will improve the housing market as well as other industries, which are then likely to employ more workers, thus reducing unemployment. Unfortunately, this scenario is likely to happen only when an economy is a closed one – that is, there are restrictions on trade and capital flow across countries. [Sundaram Janakiramanan. QE3 and the S’pore economy. Today. November 1 2012]

But, but, but… is it not that a large open economy that the US is is pretty much close to a closed economy, professor?

Categories
Economics

[2596] Today is Scott Sumner Day

Yes, it is.

I haven’t seen anyone else say it yet, so I will.  The Fed’s policy move today might not have happened — probably would not have happened — if not for the heroic blogging efforts of Scott Sumner.  Numerous other bloggers, including the market monetarists and some Keynesians and neo Keynesians have been important too, plus Michael Woodford and some others, but Scott is really the guy who got the ball rolling and persuaded us all that there is something here and wouldn’t let us forget about it. [It’s not just monetary policy, it’s Scott Sumner day. Tyler Cowen. Marginal Revolution. September 13 2012]

Categories
Economics

[2593] OMT; yet another acronym in crisis monetary policy

Yet just another day in the year of crisis monetary policy. And of course, yet another acronym to add to the alphabet soup.

The acronym of the day is OMT. That stands for Outright Monetary Transaction. It is a unlimited but sterilized bond buying program aimed at keep yield of sovereign bonds down, with some conditions, without seniority privilege.

The market is responding relatively well to the OMT but I think the OMT is insufficient to address the woes Europe is facing. The European Central Bank cannot do everything but the monetary policy is a potent firepower nonetheless and I think the ECB has not been using it.

From money supply point of view, the word unlimited is misleading because it is a sterilized operation. That means the ECB can purchase an unlimited amount of bonds, injecting unlimited amount money into the system and then withdrawing the same “unlimited” amount of money from somewhere else. So, any purchase of sovereign bonds by the ECB necessarily means someone else will suffer.

The sterilization is done because Europe, or rather Germany, is so much against quantitative easing, apparently still hung up from inflationary pre-World War II experience.

The sterilization aspect is not different from the previous but defunct program called the Securities Markets Program (the SMP).

It appears to me that the only real difference is the no-seniority nature of the OMT. Then again, as Alphaville at the Financial Times quoted a Mr. Nowakowski, a fixed income strategist at Roubini:

The ECB can promise to be pari passu, until a default threatens and it can then pressure Euritania to let it swap into local or international bonds without CACs that receive special treatment, exactly as it did with Greece. They could still argue, though not in good faith, that those bonds are not senior to anyone, they just got lucky again to get such a great offer. The ECB has tremendous leverage on countries whose banking systems depend on it for funding, so it can call the shots. [Joseph Cotterill. Seniority, the SMP and the OMT. Alphaville. September 6 2012]

So, why again is the market rallying?

Categories
Economics Politics & government

[2587] You shall not crucify mankind upon a cross of gold

I do not take hard currency idea seriously. Hard currency is a wacky idea. I generally think supporters of hard currency, gold standard advocates being the worst, as non-serious discussants of monetary policy. Hard currency is inflexible and it will exert unnecessary pain in time of crisis. If we had a hard currency all over the world during the last financial crisis, we would have easily experienced the worst depression in modern times. Worse than the 1930s Great Depression.

It would be worse because the world’s economy was so much bigger in the 2000s than it was in the 1930s and given real prices of commodities associated with hard currency, gold and silver specifically, the supply of hard currency could not accommodate the demand for money. The world’s economy would be much smaller than it was at every single point of modern history even without any crisis.

I am a libertarian but unlike too many libertarians, I prefer fiat money to gold standard. I have rationalized my position before.

On top of that, I am a monetarist because I understand the basic operations of modern monetary policy and its implications. I accept the lesson taught by Milton Friedman and Anna Schwartz: in times of crisis, expand the money supply. Under hard currency, the expansion is almost impossible while deflation, which as damaging to general welfare as hyperinflation is, is always a real threat.

Although I am generally reluctant to admit it, I do ultimately support previous quantitative easing exercises in the United States and other similar money supply expansion in other parts of the world. The fear of expansion is always about high rate of inflation but it is quite clear for the past few years that there is a considerable unmet demand for money that money supply expansion does not create any kind of noticeable damaging inflation. Until inflation becomes a credible threat, I will not oppose money supply expansion by too much.

In other words, I think Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke has done a great job. Bernanke given his scholarship is the right man for the job.

So, I take it as a demerit when Mitt Romney said he would not reappoint Bernanke to the job if he is elected as the next President of the United States. And I take it as a huge downer for the Republicans to bow to unreasonable crowd that is the Tea Party and then push for gold standard.

This may force me to reassess my bias with respect to US politics.

I have a Republican bias just because of Republicans’ economic policy has typically been closer to my preference (notwithstanding the Clinton’s years that blurred the line; I do consider Clinton as the best President in recent times). At least, the rhetoric is. And I do think the selection of Ryan Paul as exciting. This election has catapulted libertarian understanding to the national front farther than Ron Paul has ever done.

But the contemporary Republican view on monetary policy might be too much for me.

There are many great economists within the Republican camp at the moment. It is the responsibility of these economists to advise the Republicans of the folly of gold standard.

Categories
Economics

[2567] A tribute to Anna Schwartz

Anna Schwartz is not a name too familiar with too many Malaysians. That is a shame because her works as an economist wield great influence in this era of economic uncertainty. Read up major financial newspapers, magazines, financial news channels or leading economic blogs and one will come up an idea which she—together with the more famous Milton Friedman—advanced when they were alive: the roles of central bank in addressing economic fluctuation.

She died on June 21 this year.

Anna Schwartz collaborated with Friedman in writing A Monetary History of the United States, 1867 – 1960. The book, written in 1963, introduced the world to monetarism, the school of economics that eroded Keynesian dominance in economics and policymaking in the 1970s. The book is one of the most influential modern economic books. It belongs on the same shelf as John Maynard Keynes’ The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money, and other great books that changed the course of human history.

Both Schwartz and Friedman pointed out that the Great Depression of the 1930s was a result of tight monetary policy. The Federal Reserve shrunk the money supply at a time when money demand increased tremendously as everybody hoarded cash in panic. The Fed should have increased the money supply instead.

This is an important revelation because the pre-1970s orthodoxy was that fiscal policy was the only real economic stabilization tool: only government spending could fight economic downturn. The first monetarists proved that was not so. Monetary policy is a credible and a better short-run alternative to fiscal policy: manage the money supply instead; expand it in times of crisis.

Fed chairman Ben Bernanke is a scholar of the Great Depression. As a member of the Fed’s Board of Governors before he became the chairman, he issued a mea culpa. “Let me end my talk by abusing slightly my status as an official representative of the Federal Reserve. I would like to say to Milton and Anna: Regarding the Great Depression. You’re right, we did it. We’re very sorry. But thanks to you, we won’t do it again,” he said.

Most central bankers have learned from the 1930s mistakes. Amid the 2008-2009 financial crisis, the Fed lowered its interest rate close to zero from above 5% in just slightly more than a year. The aggressive monetary policy, among others, is partly a lesson taught by Schwartz and Friedman.

Keynesianism was increasingly dominant especially after the Fed set its interest rate close to zero however. There is a theory called the liquidity trap: the central bank is unable to push the nominal interest rate below zero even as an even lower interest rate is warranted in a recession. That is a complicated way of saying that the central bank ran out of ammo once the interest rate had been pushed to zero.

As a matter of fact, interest rates in the US, Europe, Japan and UK were close to zero by 2009. Even so, the economy seemed to require more stimuli. The Keynesians were calling for more government spending. Indeed, governments all around the world embarked on massive stimulus spending to fight the 2008-2009 recession.

Friedman’s death in 2006 partly coincided with what now has been described as the Keynesian resurgence. As if the stars were aligned, the foremost Keynesian of our day, Paul Krugman, won the Nobel Prize for Economics in 2008. The Keynesian school returned three decades later.

Whatever the successes of the recent Keynesian approach, the cost is painful especially judging from the European experience: Keynesianism exacerbated the problem of public finance. That has turned the table again.

While Friedman’s death coincided with the Keynesian resurgence, Schwartz’s death coincided with the monetarist resurgence.

The proof is for all to see. In the US, Europe, Japan and in the UK, central banks are now at the forefront of stabilization exercises despite liquidity trap. In contrast, it is the government that has run out of ammunition to do more. Governments in Europe are paralysed as far as the stabilization policy is concerned due to economic and political realities.

The resurgence of monetarism—market monetarism to be exact—is important to advocates of small government. It yet again counters the urge to resort to fiscal policy in times of crisis that will inevitably increase the roles of government. Market monetarism does so by arguing the Keynesian liquidity trap is irrelevant by pointing out the central bank can supply as much money as it is necessary without much adverse impacts as long as there is demand for it.

Monetarism, yet again, provides a credible alternative to fiscal policy. That will humble those who take the government as omnipotent.

Schwartz—and Friedman—deserved to be remembered because of that.

Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved
First published in The Sun on July 6 2012.