ECO 407 Competing Views in Macroeconomic Theory and Policy. Lecture 9 Should Central Banks Be Targeting Inflation?

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ECO 407 Competing Views in Macroeconomic Theory and Policy Lecture 9 Should Central Banks Be Targeting Inflation? Gustavo Indart Slide 1

Is Inflation Always Bad? What are the main costs of inflation? Who bears these costs? It erodes the value of money By creating greater uncertainty, it reduces investment The costs of hyperinflation are undisputable For example, Germany (1920s), Hungary (1945), Argentina (1980s), Zimbabwe (2008), Venezuela (2017) Mainstream economists have exploited people s fear of high inflation to push for excessive anti-inflationary policies Only zero inflation is both low and stable Some studies suggest that inflation rates up to 10 percent do not affect economic growth, while others suggest rates of up to 20 percent Gustavo Indart Slide 2

What Are the Cause of Inflation? Orthodox economists believe that inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon (Friedman) Too much money chasing too few goods Inflation is the result of excessive demand due to too much money in the economy The solution then is to implement contractionary monetary policy Post-Keynesian economists believe that inflation is not demand-determined but rather the result of cost considerations Therefore, contractionary monetary policy will not have the desired effects Gustavo Indart Slide 3

Money Supply and Inflation in the U.S. Gustavo Indart 4

Orthodox View of Inflation Inflation is a monetary phenomenon and thus curbing inflation requires tight monetary policy (to reduce AD) The view that monetary policy should be used to curb inflation is based on three main hypotheses: Central banks control the money supply Money supply is an intermediate target Dichotomy between monetary and real analyses The first hypothesis has more recently been replaced by a more realistic one: Central banks cannot control the money supply They control instead the short-term rate of interest Gustavo Indart Slide 5

Post-Keynesian View of Inflation There is no relationship between money and prices, and thus inflation is never a monetary phenomenon In addition, demand plays only a small role in the determination of prices There are two types of goods: Flex-price goods (e.g., agricultural products) whose prices are determined by the market Fixed-price goods (e.g., manufactured goods) whose prices are set by firms as a markup over production costs If wages increase, for instance, the firm can: Leave the markup unchanged and pass the increase to consumers Cost-push inflation Reduce the markup and absorb the higher cost Gustavo Indart Slide 6

Inflation Targeting: The New Consensus Model In the 1990s, the Bank of Canada officially adopted a policy of inflation targeting This new measure is part of the New Consensus model, which consists of three main relationships: A negative relationship between interest rates and investment (an IS-curve) natural rate of interest A positive relationship between the output gap and inflation (a Philips curve) A Taylor rule where the central bank should change the rate of interest whenever: Actual output deviates from potential output Actual inflation deviates from the chosen target Gustavo Indart Slide 7

Post-Keynesian Critique of the New Consensus Model Post-Keynesians reject the existence of a natural rate of interest Relying on the supposed existence of this rate would lead to poor monetary policy decisions Post-Keynesians don t believe that inflation is demanddetermined Resting monetary policy decisions on demand would lead to poor policy decisions The New Consensus model does not allow a role for fiscal policy Post-Keynesians reject that only monetary policy can regulate cycles and tame inflationary pressures Gustavo Indart Slide 8

What s Canada s Natural Rate? Real Prime Rate of Interest, 1975-2015 Source: Trading Economics, 2015 Gustavo Indart Slide 9

Estimates of the U.S. Natural Rate Source: T. Laubach and J. Williams, Measuring the Natural Rate of Interest Redux, 2015. Gustavo Indart Slide 10

Post-Keynesian Critique of the New Consensus Model (cont d) The money supply cannot be controlled by the central bank Money supply should adjust to the needs of the banking system The money supply is thus an endogenous variable The central bank can control the rate of interest Thus the rate of interest is an administered price and a distributive variable There is no separation between money and economic activity Impossible to discuss real activity without discussing monetary conditions and the banking sector Economic activity cannot be slowed down by lack of saving, but it can be affected by lack of banking lending Gustavo Indart Slide 11

Is Inflation Targeting Responsible for Bringing Down Inflation? Inflation targeting was adopted when inflation was already on the way down This period corresponds to a general decrease in real wages What explain that inflation decreased to very low levels in both developed countries and emerging markets? The explanation is provided by the greater globalization of the economy: Globalization of the economy facilitates the location of production in low wage countries Trade liberalization allows the imports of lower price consumption and other goods Gustavo Indart Slide 12

Modifications and Alternatives to Inflation Targeting What rate of inflation? Which measure of inflation? What time horizon to bring down inflation? Price-level targeting vs. inflation-targeting Fixed-exchange rates versus inflation targeting Nominal-GDP targeting Unemployment targeting Gustavo Indart Slide 13

Should the 2-Percent Target Be Abandoned? The inflation target is not appropriate when facing supply shocks or balance-sheet recessions Obsession with inflation seems dated when inflation is not an issue anymore Reasons to abandon the 2-percent target The 0% lower bound is too close Need to reduce real wages It perpetuates the feedback loop of stagnation and low inflation Gustavo Indart Slide 14