The Unemployed Need Bold, Creative Moves from the Fed
Mark Thoma
@ Fiscal Times:
The
Federal Reserve has increased the size of its balance sheet nearly
four-fold
since the onset of the financial crisis, from around $870
billion in 2007 to $3.35 trillion today. This has caused people like Peter Schiff to predict that
we are headed for a severe outbreak of inflation. An inflation problem
is just round the corner we’ve been told again and again since 2008, yet
inflation remains below the Fed’s 2% target, long-run
inflation expectations are well-anchored, and there is little evidence
in recent data that inflation is or will be a problem.
Why is inflation so low?
Presently, demand is weak because of the recession and that
is one of the reasons the inflation rate is below the Fed’s two percent
target. But that is not the only reason inflation is too low at a time
when economic conditions call for more aggressive monetary policy.
Stimulating demand and creating inflation has not been as easy as the
Fed thought it would be even with the dramatic increase in the size of
its balance sheet, and the Fed has been unwilling to take the additional
bold and creative steps needed to bring inflation up to –– or in the
short-run even above –– its target level.
Monetary
policy changes the inflation rate through policies that change demand
conditions in large numbers of markets. For example, a Fed induced fall
in the interest rate should increase demand in markets that rely upon
credit, and that should put upward pressure on prices in those markets.
One
of the main ways the Fed stimulates the demand for goods and services
is by giving the banks more money to lend through what are known as open
market operations. But if this money simply piles up in banks as excess
reserves instead of being used to make new loans to consumers and
businesses, it won’t have any effect on the demand for goods and
services and it won’t cause prices to rise.
Excess reserves are, in fact, piling up in banks –– from near zero before the recession to around $1.75 trillion today
–– instead of flowing into the economy and offsetting the fall in
demand from the recession. Because of this, demand is too low,
unemployment is too high, and inflation has consistently been running
below the Fed’s two percent target.
So
here’s the question. Why hasn’t the Fed shown the same boldness and
creativity in responding to the unemployment problem that it displayed
when it needed to bail out financial institutions? When banks were in
trouble, the Fed created a whole host of special facilities and pushed
the rules to the limits. Some of the special facilities and polices
worked out very well, others didn’t work at all, and some had unintended
consequences. But the Fed was willing to take the necessary risks and
that allowed it to come to the rescue of the financial system.
But
now, when unemployment is the problem, the Fed seems unwilling to push
the limits to the same degree. For example, the Fed could charge banks
for holding excess reserves instead of paying them interest on those
reserves as it does now. With such a penalty in place banks would have a
much larger incentive to make loans, and some of the piled up reserves
would leave banks and turn into new demand for goods and services.
That’s just what the economy needs.
More aggressive, out of the
box policy could speed the recovery of output and employment, and there
are many other steps the Fed could take to help the economy along. It
could even consider the use of helicopter money as debated recently by
some of the leaders in monetary policy.
But whenever such suggestions are made to the Fed the response is
invariably the same. Time and again as the struggles of the working
class drag on and on, financial stability –– something Chairman Bernanke
was careful to point to in a recent speech –– and fear out of control inflation take precedence over more aggressive policy to help the unemployed.
We
do not want to repeat the wage-price spiral problems of the 1970s and
the recession of 79-82 that was needed to break the cycle. So in the
long-run, we want to hit our inflation target. We also don’t want to
repeat the financial meltdown we’ve just been through. But the risks of
inflation and financial instability have been overblown relative to the
large costs associated with high long-term unemployment and it’s time
for the Fed to address the unemployment problem with the same
creativity, boldness, and perseverance it displayed when banks were its
main concern.
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