What would be the best way to run the Fed?

Promoted by Brendan

One thing that Alan Greenspan rails about in his book is that his office has been used (maybe mis-used) as a political tool. Like it or not, that's the case. We've elevated his words to the point that they move markets. As such, instead of good monetary policy, it seems like the primary job of the Federal Reserve has been to not rock the economic and market boat rather than to control inflation via the money supply.

Although many hard core libertarians would like to see us return to the gold standard, a more realistic approach is to eliminate the Federal Reserve as we know it and instead go with a rules based formula which has been advocated by Milton Friedman and more recently, Gary Becker of the University of Chicago.


To regain control over expectations and its own policies, the Fed should establish a rule easily calculated from publicly available information about how the federal funds rate is determined. With such a rule, investors and businesses would be able to forecast perfectly what the Fed will do next week because market participants would know all the information that determine the Fed's behavior. There could be no disappointments, and all market adjustments to any changes in the federal funds rate would be fully and continually incorporated in asset prices and other market measures before, not after, the Fed makes its decisions. Then Fed policies would be determining expectations about interest rates and other variables rather than the other way around.

To show how rules would work, suppose the rule was to target the inflation rate at 2 per cent per year. If say the actual inflation rate were 3 per cent over a several month period prior to a Fed meeting, the Fed would "lean against the wind", and raise the federal funds rate from its long run level by a specified amount known in advance to investors. This would counteract the higher than desired inflation rate. Conversely, if the actual inflation rate had been 1 per cent, the Fed would lower this interest rate by a specified amount that would be known by market participants. This action would help strengthen an economy that was weaker than the Fed desired. Investors would know what the Fed would do weeks and even months before the Fed did it, and they would adjust their behavior more smoothly to their accurate expectations about central bank behavior.

The same considerations would apply to more complicated "Taylor rules" that relate actions by the Fed not only to deviations of actual inflation rates from a targeted rate, but also to deviations of actual GDP growth from a potential growth rate. Since information could be made available to the public about how the Fed would use trends in labor force growth, investments, and productivity to calculate potential GDP growth, the Fed's responses implied by such a rule would also be known in advance. In this way, investors and other market participants could anchor their expectations to what the Fed will actually do in different macroeconomic situations.

 

 

How would the rules have responded more recently? Becker mentions the popular Taylor Rule as a guide.

According to a recent unpublished paper by John Taylor of Stanford University, the Fed would have raised the federal funds rate between 2002 and 2006 by considerably more than it did had such a Taylor rule been followed. By doing that, the Fed's actions would have prevented some of the mortgage and other lending at very low interest rates that took place during the past few years. Taylor's analysis suggests that following such a rule would have reduced, and perhaps even largely eliminated, the excesses in the housing boom since 2003.

That seems like a economic win.....

 

 

....and the political argument is obvious.

The use of rules rather than discretion to guide interest rate policy would shield central banks from domestic political pressures, and would anchor market expectations in accurate knowledge about what central banks will do in various local and global economic circumstances. These types of advantages of rules over discretion apply not only to central bank behavior, but also to policies by other government agencies. For example, should anti-trust authorities treat each merger, buyout, or meeting among competitors as unique events that require separate analysis to determine if they are anti-competitive, or should these regulators have clear and easily understand rules about what determines anti-trust violations? Clear rules are preferable here too since that would enable companies to predict the responses by anti-trust regulators when considering mergers and other actions. It would also help insulate these regulators from political pressures. In particular, the American and European attacks on Microsoft, and the European opposition to the merger of GE and Honeywell, probably would not have happened if competitive policies were guided by clear and sensible rules about what constitutes anti-competitive actions rather than by complaints of and pressures from politicians and from competitors to Microsoft and GE.

 

 

Will it happen? I don't think so. Certainly, you'd never get a Fed Chairman to recommend that he's not necessary, and we need to know there's a great oz behind the curtain lighting the way.

It makes for great theatre as we'll witness today when the Fed is expected to cut rates by 50bps, but it probably doesn't make for great monetary policy.

http://www.becker-posner-blog.com/index.html

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Friedman was still suggesting that as late as

his econtalk podcast interview last year before he died.

He feels a computer could and should do it in a controlled and systematic way to keep money supply growth stable, very slow and predictable.

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I'll make a deal with you--

You figure out a way to report economic indicators like inflation and unemployment in a much more accurate way, and I will agree to link the federal funds rate to some formula derived from those indicators.   As it is now, I think that the reported inflation rate is a joke, and I'm rather skeptical of unemployment stats and even the GDP stat.

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Deal.

[AT QB writes down skymutt's suggestion.]

It sounds like you're being a bit TIC, but we know the biases of the economic indicators and we're going to use them to determine monetary policy whether it's the wizard making the calls or a computer.  As long as the biases don't change or switch signs (negative or positive) then I don't see this as an impediment to my system.  IOW, if we target CPI @ 2.5%, what does it matter that actual inflation is 2.0% if that upward bias remains in place?

The point is having a transparent, effective way of operating the Fed (without politics getting in the way.)  I think this mechanism accomplishes all of the above.

 

 

[PS....thanks for the promotion, Brendan.]

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Maybe my brain works differently

because of how I view the economy. Call me crazy, but somehow, measuring unemployments as an "economic indicator just doesn't seem right to me.

If you get my meaning, I simply don't think it tells anything definitive. Unemployment is governed by other factors...not to mention that unemployment can look OK while real factors are fermenting real and bad future outcomes.

To illustrate, I remember reading an economics book and the section in question was about misreading indicators and fallacious thinking.

The book said something like:

we don't blame thermometers for low temperatures and wouldn't consider holding a lighter or candle under a thermostat to warm up the house. Why? because we basically understand how this stuff works.

Likewise, I often wonder if we suffer from such errors in economic forecasting.

For example, based on my understanding, recessions and downturns are always preceded by growth...that alone means nothing. But this growth is always accompanied by relatively stable prices...that alone also means nothing. But this growth and stable stable prices is also accompanied by mild inflation. via an increase in the money supply.

Also, all these things can be brought about in different ways. I think we err in mixing indicator info incorrectly and therefore worry about the wrong things.

I'm just rambling.

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Philosophically,

I would agree as it pertains to many indicators and this is especially true with unemployment as it's a lagging indicator of the economy.

 

And bringing back to the simplicity of a rule:

Taylor's rule only takes into account GDP and Inflation.  It's been good over the long haul, but would not have led to a good outcome had it been instituted in the mid 1970's.  Of course, nobody placed high enough importance in inflation back then which led to the problem in the first place, a condition that a Taylor rule could have prevented and surely would have mitigated.

Page 21 of this report shows how the Taylor Rule ran vs. actual policy.
http://www.richmondfed.org/publications/economic_research/economic_quarterly/pdfs/spring2000/hetzel.pdf

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Inflation, yes...but from what?

Price inflation is fine. It is a pure market result and I have no problem with it. It's monetary inflation and knowing when to distinguish it that can be a problem. Ypu'd think this is a pretty simple distinction to make and I'm sure it is but are these things being taken into account? I'd like to think so.

The real problem for me is a bit murky and I'm not quite sure how to put into solid wording.

I've always learned that good market process should cause prices to fall....naturally. Granted, it's not the ONLY thing that would cause prices to fall but it should cause prices to fall. When we have monetary inflation (like we've had) and prices continue to rise and growth continues to occur, something is wrong.

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How about an example? (nm)

..

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example of what?

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Well, I take price inflation

as not adjusting the CPI for higher quality among the goods. For instance, cars now have computers in them and are much better from a quality perspective....something that should be reflected in the price, but not theoretically accounted for in a true inflation measure.....ie a car in 1967 is theoretically the same as a car in 2007 from a CPI basis.

I just needed a clarification through example. Is the above what you're describing?

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No.

I'm talking about basic indicators of economic health and forecasting.

I don't think Inflation by itself tells us much with accounting for its relationship to consumer prices, interest rates and growth.

Basically I think the relationship between monetary inflation (through lowered interest rates), growth and consumer price movements is the needed combo of data ( or at least a big part of it). Speaking of one without the context of the others is incomplete and can be misleading. That's my feeling.

A good starting point is have interest rates reflect something that isn't controlled by people and offers an accurate price of borrowing money.

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Now I'm with you....

That's an interesting thought. I don't have a good answer. (You should give a shout to Becker on his blog.)

For better or worse, we've sort of eschewed the holistic model in favor of inflation targeting (I would refer back to Friedman's comment re: the Fed essentially acting like robots since Volcker.) You can see that they haven't deviated much from Taylor's lead lately so my gut is that even the Fed has bought into simple CPI/GDP modeling without saying as much.

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The Taylor Rule derives

from the Rational Expectations Model.

I did a quick Google search on "Taylor Rule" and "Friedman Rule" and sure enough I found technical papers that demonstrated that they were essentially equaivalent.

i think John has a point that in the real world the Taylor rule would have to applied against real-time data...of course, macroeconomic data is often posteriorly revised.

And what about exogenous economic shocks?

I also think one of the reasons you have the Fed is to act as a lender of last resort in times of credit stickiness...

I've a suggestion to keep you all occupied.
Learn to swim.
Moms gonna fix it all soon.
Moms comin round to put it back the way it ought to be.

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Re: utilization of real time data....

i think John has a point that in the real world the Taylor rule would have to applied against real-time data...of course, macroeconomic data is often posteriorly revised.

 

How is that problem different whether we use a model or human? 

 

 

Congrates on the Lew Rockwell post.  Good stuff.

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QB, this where I tend to be difficult

This is the problem with models. Models are snap shots that miss evolving, inexact dynamics.

It's like a math model of the behavior of someone crossing the street (if you can somehow imagine that...bear with me); a model can only assume so much. So, when we make such a model, it's limited in giving us info upon which to base action to help the person optimize his "crossing of the street". Even if we account for traffic and traffic lights and whatnot, there are so many individual actions going on that can change in one real word case to another: the boldness of the crosser to step in front of cars, the permissiveness of the drivers to slow down and cede a few seconds to let the person by....all such things and a whole lot more affect what is optimal in each case and a model is limited in use for being a basis for arranging a "formula". It will always be too basic and static. It's more like the model is the game "Frogger"...very predictable. It has some use in creating formulas for crossing streets but real life isn't so neat and predictable. We need to get around this without pretending the real-life variables aren't there.

Granted, the example is lame but the idea is conveyed pretty well there....I hope.

So, this leaves people exasperated and they say "So what the hell are we supposed to do then, dammit!?!". Well, I think the approach to monetary policy needs to reflect this idea and allow for this changing-by-second dynamic that is beyond the use of math models.

If I had the end-all, be-all of answers, I'd be famous. I simply don't know. Granted, Austrians and many others have ideas that try to account for this perpetual change and unknowable ebbs and flows in a system that allows markets to control and dictate currency, interest and money supply issues but they often involve the use of metals like gold and silver to "compete" (if I can use that term). I don't fully understand but I do kinda get the logic in a hazy sorta way....though I'm doing nothing here to demonstrate it.

The "drawbacks" are that government can't spend as freely (too bad!) and I suppose money supply remains kinda tight and you won't get the spurts of super cheap money that fuel fast growth. By fast growth, I mean growth that is at odds with real conditions and create discords that can't be ironed out without pain.

This means growth must be driven by real growth factors and not artificially (like a sugar rush) sped up...only to crash (down turn, recession) at a later point. It means we must look at how to grow the economy in more natural ways that don't need artificial stimulants and "steroids". And that's harder and not as much "fun" for pols looking for easy-sounding solutions. It takes work.

SO, it's spinach and broccoli and other "low glycemic" foods...steady, healthy energy that is better in the long run. For this, you forgo the red bulls and refined sugars that give you deceptive energy that makes you feel better and more energetic than you really are.

Well, we are buzzing along on millions of red bulls right now. We can't pretend we're really bursting with real energy for ever. The sugar rush will have to end and the lack of real healthy energy will rear its ugly head in a painful "withdrawal".

Sorry to ramble, I hope you get meaning and why I struggle with easy "solutions".

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I would amend this comment

"We've elevated his words to the point that they move markets."

Some have elevated his words to the point that they move markets.

Not everyone agrees that Greenspan is the God of economics. The Godfather maybe.

It is the economy, stupid.

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