Largely because it was
released over a mid-summer weekend and because it's one of those potentially
sleep-inducing (at least outside of the academic economic world) working papers from the
Federal Reserve, a paper entitled "Gauging the Ability of the FOMC to Respond to Future Recessions" has garnered relatively little attention.
The author of the paper, David Reifschneider, looks at how the
Federal Reserve responded to the Great Recession and past economic contractions
and how it will respond to the next recession, a recession that, statistically
speaking, will arrive sooner rather than later.
As we all know, the
Federal Reserve has traditionally used its interest rate policies as ammunition
to ward off the horrifying spectres of inflation and economic contractions as
shown on this table which provides us with the cumulative reductions in the
federal funds rate over the past nine recessions:
Over the nine recessions,
the average cumulative reduction in the federal funds rate ranged from 283
basis points (2.83 percent) to 1038 basis points (10.38 percent) with an
average of With the federal funds rate currently sitting at around 0.4 percent, obviously, unless there are
significant moves upwards over the coming months, the Fed basically has boxed
itself into an interest rate policy corner. even if the current forecasts of a
return to a three percent federal funds rate prove to be true as shown on
this table:
Fortunately for the
central banker braintrust, they have other monetary weapons in their arsenal,
weapons that have led to a massively bloated balance sheet since the end of the Great Recession as shown here:
....and here:
Lest we forget, the
Federal Reserve also touts the success of its forward guidance program, you
know, the program where they telegraph their future moves to avoid any
surprises down the road. This, from my uneducated perspective, has a
fairly limited impact on the economy given that the Fed is still quite
secretive about its exact plans and the precise timing of those plans. In any case, given that the Fed has
painted itself into an interest rate corner, it has no choice but to rely on
its armoury of experimental monetary policies like quantitative easing.
To that end, the author assesses the adequacy of the FOMC's monetary
policy toolkit if it were needed to combat a future "sharp" recession
using the following economic data:
- PCE inflation is
2 percent, federal funds rate is 3 percent and stable
- recession occurs -
unemployment rises 5 percentage points above its baseline to almost 10 percent
after two years. This is followed by a slow recovery in real economic
activity with the unemployment rate taking three and a half years to return to
normal and inflation falls to a low of 1.5 percent.
In the model,
policymakers use two non-traditional monetary policy tools:
1.) they announce their
intention to purchase either $2 trillion or $4 million in longer-term Treasuries
and
2.) they make the
unprecedented announcement that they will lower the federal funds rate to its
effective lower bound (i.e. zero percent) more quickly and keep it there as
long as the unemployment rate is above 5 percent, a "lower-for-onger"
policy.
Now, let's look at three
main scenarios, comparing the constrained policy rule (i.e. an effective lower
bound is in place - blue dashed line), an unconstrained policy rule (i.e. there
is no effective lower bound in place - red dashed line) and a constrained
policy tool with forward guidance and asset purchases (solid black line).
This set of graphs shows the impact of the $2 trillion asset purchase and
lower-for-longer guidance on the federal funds rate, the ten-year Treasury
yield, unemployment rate and inflation rate:
This set of graphs shows
the impact of the $4 trillion asset purchase and lower-for-longer guidance on
the federal funds rate, the ten-year Treasury yield, unemployment rate and
inflation rate:
It is interesting to see
how low the federal funds rate will go into negative territory in both cases
where there is no effective lower bound (red dashed line). It is also
interesting to see that, in the $4 trillion QE scenario, the ten-year Treasury
yield in the constrained policy with asset purchases drops to just over 1
percent and in the unconstrained policy, drops to less than 0.5 percent or less than one-third of what the yield is at the present time.
While a lot of this
analysis is academic, it is, nonetheless interesting because it provides us
with a glimpse of the Federal Reserve's mindset. While the Fed claims
that the interest rate highs of the past were "economic one-offs" and
that future economic downturns will not require interest rate adjustments to
counter recessionary pressures, the increasing reliance on non-conventional
policies like quantitative easing are, at the very least, worrisome given the Bank of Japan's fifteen year colossal quantitate easing
failure. The future Federal Reserve may find that it has to be
even more creative if it has any hope of bringing the economy back from a
recession.
"We’re in the biggest mess we’ve been in since the 1930s" according to Allen Meltzer who was born in 1928 and is viewed by many economist as America’s foremost expert in monetary policy. Allen Meltzer is recognized for his wisdom and achievements in economics. In recent years his mood has been troubled and he has been quoted as saying “We’ve never had a more problematic future.”
ReplyDeleteMeltzer is a professor of political economy at Carnegie Mellon University and a visiting fellow at Stanford University's Hoover Institution. He is also the author of the three-volume “A History of the Federal Reserve.” For over 25 years he was the chair of the Shadow Open Market Committee, a group that meets regularly to discuss the policy of the Federal Reserve.
Just because we have muddled along putting band-aids on our economy does not mean that we have done anything but postpone the day of reckoning, and in many ways we may of made it far worse. Below is an article presenting some of reasoning behind Meltzer's concern over current economic policy.
http://brucewilds.blogspot.com/2016/04/it-will-all-end-badly-economist-allen.html