Wednesday, December 10, 2014

The Impasse of Monetary Policy - Part 1- Setting the scene


 

Why The Fed, by itself, cannot deliver a sustainable recovery?







 A 6  part series


 Part 1:  Setting the scene


   

1.     INTRODUCTION
                                              

America’s economic revival is hindered by a number of dubious notions, or untenable convictions. Chief among them is overreliance on monetary policy as a solution to all economic problems, especially restoring growth and employment after a recession hits.

Six years after the Great Recession of 2008, despite the extraordinarily low interest rates bolstered by aggressive Quantitative Easing (QE) for an unprecedented $4.5 trillion of bond purchases by the Fed, the recovery still looks curiously tentative, if not anemic.

·     Growth in 2014 was under 2.5 %, even if the second half of the year the economy expanded at a surprising 3.5% as to compensate for a measly 1.3 % growth in the first half. There are still too many unknowns to declare the last 2 quarters as growth-rate a trend setters.

·     Labor participation rate under 63% is at a 36 years low, pointing to about 10 million less people with jobs relative to 2008 when the recession was declared. This “slack” in the labor force, despite an unemployment rate which finally dropped below the target 6 % in the 4th Q of 2014, continues to trouble Fed’s chair Janet Yellen who described her concern at the most recent Jackson Hole conference.

·     Inflation is unresponsive and tracking below 2% despite the unparalleled QE programs pumping many $ trillions of liquidity into the capital markets. Alas, the outdated and restrictive way by which inflation is measured may well be masking a looming problem: the unavoidable impact of both the record rise in stock prices and the large appreciation in house prices since 2009 is omitted from the inflation index.

·       Consumer spending which accounts for more than 2/3 of U.S. economic activity is still inexplicably muted, despite the cheapest borrowing rates in recent memory and the vast household debt reduction, from 98% of GDP down to a sustainable 81% now. More mysteriously, rising stock markets, historically associated with increased household outlays, have this time failed to stimulate higher consumer spending.

·     Deleveraging, an imperative for financial stability, is still a mixed-bag: while private-sector indebtedness has decreased to historically sustainable levels of around 80% of GDP, gross public debt, now over 105% of GDP, is a daunting obstacle if renewed recessionary fears do indeed engender increased government spending. 

Even more unsettling is that the Great Recession of 2008, which is still playing out with an abnormally lackluster recovery, still faces the same and yet unanswered question that followed the 2001 crisis: to what extent can  expansionary monetary policy – undeniably  correlated with asset and credit “bubbles” –  also repair the damage that it helped create ?  


1.    TAKING STOCK OF THE CURRENT  SITUATION

2.1   Discarding some misconceptions first

Political discourse in the US projects unmistakable signs of confusion when references are made to either John Keynes or Milton Freedman. In the first case, Keynesian economics is criticized because of the incremental burden that increased government spending imposes on taxpayers; while in the second case, Milton Freedman’s monetarism is feared because of the inflationary risk that increasing money supply poses in support of a faltering economy. Both theories contain so many nuances and conditions that, in the absence of correct contextual clarity, condemning them is not difficult to do. Yet, the reality is quite different.

No, since 2008, the US economy has witnessed neither an alarming Keynesian rise of excessive government spending, nor an inflationary overdose of monetarist money supply.
 
We have witnessed instead, in the first case, record government deficits resulting from shortfalls in tax receipts that economic recessions bring – this time, further aggravated with misguided tax-cuts already in place – and, in the second case, a daring experiment with monetary policy which – fortunately for incredulous politicians and the public at large – succeeded in preventing the insolvency and decomposition of the US banking system.  

To be clear, a massive increase of Keynesian government spending to bolster economic output – by targeting public works for instance, as was suggested by Paul Krugman and others – has not yet taken place amid our political stalemate. And, inundating the economy with excessive money as to “inflate the deficit away” through currency debasement has not taken place either; the Fed’s swapping of cash with bonds through QE has indeed increased the monetary base, but not the kind of money supply associated with massive devaluations.

But now here we are, six years later, with an uncertain economy and a tentative job market, wondering whether and how the anticipated but still elusive growth will suffice to eliminate chronic government deficits and a threat of deflation, both of which are stubbornly present.