Inflation policy, 2022: Background

Clark JOHNSON

Abstract


Abstract. By mid-2022, if not earlier, it was clear that the Federal Reserve’s inflation policy had failed. Not only did the Fed not focus on broad monetary aggregates (M2, M3, etc.), it also was not responsive to changes in end variables –an accelerating CPI indicator or Nominal GDP (NGDP). The Fed’s failing here reflects neglect by many non-Fed economists – eg, Krugman – of the same factors. The Fed has fitfully introduced average inflation targeting (AIT) over the last few years, which allows some flexibility depending on other economic variables, hence some counter-cyclicality in its methodology; it is a step toward NGDP targeting. But here too, the Powell Fed seemed not to notice cautionary signals.  By early 2022, however, monetary indicators had turned flat–just as the Powell Fed accelerated rate increases. Similarly, the dollar was rising against most other currencies, more presumptive evidence that US monetary policy is now contractionary. If we consider normal lag times, the Fed is likely to be over-doing it, so that an unnecessary recession may be in the works for 2023 or early 2024. One argument says that US pandemic and other spending in 2020 contributed to the inflationary surge in late 2021 and 2022. That is not likely: the world’s demand for treasury securities is quite robust. The US central bank does not need to monetize debt, which is the channel through which deficit spending would become inflationary. The Fed policy of paying interest on excess reserves (IOER) contributed to deflationary results during the decade following the 2008-2009 recession, a consequence of which was zero-bound interest rates. IOER, combined with the Fed’s policy of quantitative easing, resulted in a greater public sector role in resource allocation.

Keywords. John Maynard Keynes; Milton Friedman; Stephen Hanke; Broad money targeting; Nominal GDP (NGDP) targeting; Average inflation targeting (AIT); Foreign exchange rate targeting; Jerome Powell; Matthew Klein and Michael Pettis; George Selgin; Scott Sumner; Modern Monetary Theory; Interest on Excess reserves (IOER) policy; Zero-bound interest rates.

JEL. E00; E32; E52; E58; F21; F32.

Keywords


John Maynard Keynes; Milton Friedman; Stephen Hanke; Broad money targeting; Nominal GDP (NGDP) targeting; Average inflation targeting (AIT); Foreign exchange rate targeting; Jerome Powell; Matthew Klein and Michael Pettis; George Selgin; Scott Sumner; Mod

Full Text:


References


Bernanke, B. (2013). The Federal Reserve and the Financial Crisis: Lectures by Ben S. Bernanke. Princeton, NJ: Princeton.

Bloomberg, (2021). The strongest sign yet that inflation is transitory. May 20.

Coats, W. (2019). Modern monetary theory: A critique, Cato Journal, 39(3). [Retrieved from].

Congdon, T. (2022). Institute of International Monetary Research. May Report. [Retrieved from].

Economist, (2021). The Fed should explain how it will respond to rising inflation. April 17. [Retrieved from].

Economist, (2022). Why the Federal Reserve has made a historic mistake on inflation. April 23. [Retrieved from].

Keynes, J.M. (1936). The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money. New York: Harcourt, Brace & World.

Klein, M. & Pettis, M. (2020). Trade Wars are Class Wars: How Rising Inequality Distorts the Global Economy and Threatens World Peace. New Haven: Yale

Krugman, P. (2021a). Who’s afraid of the big bad boom, New York Times. May 6.

Krugman, P. (2021b). Krugman wonks out: The return of the monetary cockroaches, New York Times. May 13.

McKinnon, R. (2013). The US savings deficiency, current account deficits, and deindustrialization: Implications for China, Journal of Policy Modeling, 35(3), 44-458. doi. 10.1016/j.jpolmod.2013.03.008

Mundell, R. (1992). Trade balance patterns as global general equilibrium: The seventeenth approach to the balance of payments, in M. Baldassarri, L. Paganetto, & E.S. Phelps, International Economic Interdependence, Patterns of Trade Balance and Economic Policy Coordination. New York: St. Martins.

Selgin, G. (2018a). Floored! How a Misguided Fed Experiment Deepened and Prolonged the Great Depression. Washington, DC: Cato.

Selgin, G. (2018b). Less Than Zero: the Case for a Falling Price Level in a Growing Economy. Washington, DC: Cato.

Stastica (2022). Development of Global Currency Reserves from 1995 to 2019. [Retrieved from].

Stropoli, R. (2021). How the one-percent’s savings buried the middle class in debt, Chicago Booth Review. May 25. [Retrieved from].

Sumner, S. (2012). The Case for Nominal GDP Targeting, Mercatus Center. October 23. [Retrieved from].

Svensson, L. (2008). What have economists learned about monetary policy over the last 50 years? Sveriges Reichsbank. [Retrieved from].

Washington Post (2021). Opinion: Inflation is Rising, and Democrats Must Avoid Making it Worse, October 15. [Retrieved from].

World Bank (2022a). Macrotrends: US Manufacturing Output, 1997-2022. [Retrieved from].

World Bank (2022b). Trading Economics. Germany Manufacturing – Value Added. [Retrieved from].

World Bank (2022c). Trading Economics. China Manufacturing – Value Added. [Retrieved from].




DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1453/jepe.v9i2.2326

Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.




.......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................

Journal of Economics and Political Economy - J. Econ. Pol. Econ. - JEPE - www.kspjournals.org

ISSN: 2148-8347

Editor: jepe@ksplibrary.org   Secretarial: secretarial@ksplibrary.org   Istanbul - Turkey.

Copyright © KSP Library