Quartz #11—>Why the US Needs Its Own Sovereign Wealth Fund

Link to the Column on Quartz

Here is the full text of my 11th Quartz column, “Why the US needs its own sovereign wealth fund,” now brought home to supplysideliberal.com. It was first published on January 3, 2013. Links to all my other columns can be found here.

If you want to mirror the content of this post on another site, that is possible for a limited time if you read the legal notice at this link and include both a link to the original Quartz column and the following copyright notice:

© January 3, 2013: Miles Kimball, as first published on Quartz. Used by permission according to a temporary nonexclusive license expiring June 30, 2014. All rights reserved.


The fate of the US economy, like that of Japan, the euro zone, and the rest of the world will rest on an important fact: unless private investors or another government counteract central bank asset purchases 100%, central banks can drive asset prices up and interest rates down by buying any asset that has an interest rate above zero. The Fed has committed to continue buying $45 billion of longer-term Treasurys every month and $40 billion a month of mortgage-backed securities until the economy recovers.

But what if longer-term Treasuries and mortgage-backed securities are the wrong assets for the Fed to buy? Most of those rates are already below 3%, so it’s not that easy to push the rates down further. What is worse, when long-term assets already have low interest rates, pushing down those interest rates pushes the prices of those assets up dramatically. So the Fed ends up paying a lot for those assets, and when it later has to turn around and sell them—as it ultimately will need to, to raise interest rates and avoid inflation, it will lose money. Avoiding buying high and selling low is tough when the Fed has to move interest rates to do the job it needs to do. At least economic recovery reduces mortgage defaults and so helps raise the prices of mortgage-backed securities through that channel. But the effects of interest rates on long-term assets cut against the Fed’s bottom line in a way that is never an issue when the Fed buys and sells 3-month Treasury bills in garden-variety monetary policy.

From a technical point of view, once 3-month Treasury bill rates (and overnight federal funds rates) are near zero, the ideal types of assets for “quantitative easing” to work with are assets that (a) have interest rates far above zero and (b) are buoyed up in price when the economy does well. That means the ideal assets for quantitative easing are stock index funds or junk bond funds!

Yet, is the Federal Reserve even the right institution to be making investment decisions like this? University of Chicago finance professor John Cochrane writes in his Wall Street Journal editorial “The Federal Reserve: From Central Bank to Central Planner.”

In his speech Friday in Jackson Hole, Wyo., Mr. Bernanke made it clear that “we should not rule out the further use of such [nontraditional] policies if economic conditions warrant.”

But the Fed has crossed a bright line. Open-market operations do not have direct fiscal consequences, or directly allocate credit. That was the price of the Fed’s independence, allowing it to do one thing—conduct monetary policy—without short-term political pressure. But an agency that allocates credit to specific markets and institutions, or buys assets that expose taxpayers to risks, cannot stay independent of elected, and accountable, officials.

This is not a criticism of personalities. It is the inevitable result of investing vast discretionary power in a single institution, expecting it to guide the economy, determine the price level, regulate banks and direct the financial system.

As Cochrane points out, isn’t it a bit much to expect the Fed to both choose the right amount of stimulus for the economy and decide which financial investments are the most likely to turn a profit for a government that faces remarkably low borrowing costs?

Why not create a separate government agency to run a US sovereign wealth fund? Then the Fed can stick to what it does best—keeping the economy on track—while the sovereign wealth fund takes the political heat, gives the Fed running room, and concentrates on making a profit that can reduce our national debt.

Sovereign wealth funds are already standard for governments that have paid off their national debt and gone into the black. And some countries have both debt and sovereign wealth funds on their balance sheet. In order of holdings, the Monitor Group’s Sovereign Wealth Fund Assets Under Management Table shows that Norway, China, United Arab Emirates, Singapore, and Kuwait have the top sovereign wealth funds. Markets today are so hungry for assets as safe as US Treasurys, and so frightened of risk (pdf), that a US sovereign wealth fund would be paid handsomely to provide safe assets and shoulder some of the risk. But those financial returns are a bonus over and above the primary aim: fostering full economic recovery.

As an adjunct to monetary policy, the details of what a US Sovereign Wealth Fund buys don’t matter. As long as the fund focuses on assets with high rates of return, the effect on the economy will be stimulative, and the Fed can use its normal tools to keep the economy from getting too much stimulus. So there can be a division of labor: the US Sovereign Wealth Fund can focus on making as high a return as possible for the US taxpayer, and hire accordingly, as other sovereign wealth funds do, while the Federal Reserve focuses on getting the amount of stimulus right, which is where its expertise lies. The US Sovereign Wealth Fund needs the same level of independence as the Fed, and a single mandate to earn high returns, given the level of risk it is taking on. Above some minimum, the US Treasury can be given the authority to determine the amount the US Sovereign Wealth Fund is allowed to borrow so that no one institution would have too much power or too much responsibility.

Since it would horn in on their turf, big investment banks on Wall Street are likely to offer a chorus of complaints about a US Sovereign Wealth Fund. But after many years of playing a “heads I win, tails you lose” game with the US Government and the US taxpayers, the big investment banks have no moral standing to object to the US government and the US taxpayers finally getting some of the return that should go along with the risks that they have always had to bear.

Quartz #9—>Could the UK Be the First Country to Adopt Electronic Money?

Link to the Column on Quartz

Here is the full text of my 9th Quartz column, “Could the UK Be the First Country to Adopt Electronic Money?“ now brought home to supplysideliberal.com. In draft, this column had the working title “How the Transition to Electronic Money Rewards the First Movers and Punishes the Laggards.” It was first published on December 12, 2012. Links to all my other columns can be found here.

If you want to mirror the content of this post on another site, that is possible for a limited time if you read the legal notice at this link and include both a link to the original Quartz column and the following copyright notice:

© December 12, 2012: Miles Kimball, as first published on Quartz. Used by permission according to a temporary nonexclusive license expiring June 30, 2014. All rights reserved.


The “fiscal cliff” of mandated tax increases and spending at the end of this year is simply  the peculiar American version of the struggle of advanced countries around the world to deal with mountains of debt. The euro zone debt crisis can be depended on to provide constant grist for the news mill, as Quartz’s Euro Crunch obsession demonstrates. Japan’s debt is a quieter, but in many respects, larger time bomb, as Anthony Fensom explains in “Forget Europe: Is the Real Debt Crisis in Japan?” backed upby an official International Monetary Fund warning. And our mother country across the pond is not immune.

What people don’t fully appreciate is the extent to which hobbled monetary policy has exacerbated these debt crises. The high levels of unemployment that have dragged down tax revenues and elevated government spending—as well as making it harder for individual households to get out of debt—could have been cut short if monetary policy had more vigorously fought the slumps that have faced the US, the euro zone, Japan and the UK. And whatever the Fed, ECB, Bank of Japan and Bank of England could have done (more Quantitative Easing, anyone?), there is little doubt that they did less than they might have because of their inability to push short-term interest rates more than a hair into negative territory.  In his November 2000 academic article “Overcoming the Zero Bound on Interest Rate Policy,” Carnegie-Mellon economist Marvin Goodfriend explained with admirable directness: “No one will lend money at negative nominal interest if cash is costless to carry over time. Therefore, the power of open market operations to lower short-term interest rates to fight deflation and recession is strictly limited when nominal rates are already low on average.” In other words, if a central bank tries to push short-term interest rates very far below zero, people will shift to storing their own massive piles of paper currency, which makes it a lot harder for central banks to do their jobs.

In “How Paper Currency is Holding the US Recovery Back,” I explained how subordinating paper money to electronic money can end recessions and stop inflation. Freeing up monetary policy then makes it possible to raise taxes or cut spending to deal with debt without throwing the economy back into a deep recession. And as Matthew Yglesias points out, with the means to keep the economy at the natural level of output—at the sweet spot between recession and the overheating that accelerates inflation, we “… could happily move on to more interesting topics, such as: How do countries get rich rather than simply escape recession?”

The key is to allow for an exchange rate between paper currency and money that is recorded electronically in bank accounts. I am proposing that in times of economic emergency, the rate at which electronic money could be converted into paper currency would be allowed to vary over time. Let me use the pound as an example, and a 4% per year rate of depreciation of paper money. The exchange rate would start out at par: withdrawing £100 from a UK bank account would yield £100 of paper money, as usual. But after three months, if you withdrew £100 from a UK bank account, you would be handed about £101 in paper money. After six months, you would get about £102 in paper money, and so on. Of course, the exchange rate would apply for deposits as well: after six months, depositing £102 of paper money would add £100 to what was shown in your bank account. Retailers might accept paper money at par for longer than banks, but after a while, they too would ask for more in paper money than would be charged to a debit or credit card. But the extra paper money banks would give for withdrawals would make that a wash. The exchange rate between paper pounds and electronic pounds wouldn’t directly change how far anyone’s paycheck would go. What it would do is allow the Bank of England to set short-term interest rates anywhere above negative 4%. That is, since the value of paper pounds would be shrinking at the rate of 4% per year in relation to electronic pounds, the Bank of England could push interest rates so low that the number of electronic pounds in a bank account would gradually shrink at a somewhat slower rate.

What a negative interest rate means is that there is no way for someone saving money to stay even using a totally safe saving strategy, either in a bank account, or by saving currency. Negative interest rates help to fight recessions, and once the economy recovers, interest rates will soon return to normal. Indeed, even someone living off of interest income is likely to be helped more by the quick recovery of the economy, leading to interest rates above zero, than if interest rates had not been able to go negative, but had stayed at zero for a long time.

Negative interest rates stimulate investment when firms find that building a new factory or buying new equipment in even a wounded economy earns a better return than putting money in the bank or keeping paper money in a safe. Negative interest rates have another powerful effect as well. They cause savers to seek higher returns in foreign stocks, bonds and other assets. For the UK, the purchase of foreign assets would put pounds in the hands of people outside the UK whose only good use for those pounds is to either to buy UK products or to pass off the unwanted pounds to someone else until someone spends them on UK products. So negative interest rates stimulate exports.

Right now, most major economies are struggling to get enough aggregate demand stimulus for their economies. And one nation’s exports—an addition to aggregate demand, are another nation’s imports—a subtraction from aggregate demand. So the powerful effect of negative interest rates on exports means that the first movers in the transition to electronic money gain aggregate demand at the expense of the laggards. But that should just spur the laggards to make the transition to electronic money as well; then the whole world will have all the aggregate demand stimulus it can possibly use (and more, if care isn’t taken not to overdo the stimulus). Or if other nations stubbornly resist the transition to electronic money, the first movers could still come out ahead even if they invited other countries to do exchange rate interventions that would give them less of a boost in exports, but a bigger boost to investment in factories and equipment. (One reason the first movers would come out ahead is that such exchange rate interventions would involve the laggards lending to the first movers at even lower negative interest rates than would otherwise prevail. That means the laggards would, in effect, be paying the first movers an arm and a leg to take the funds.)

The fact that the transition to electronic money rewards the first movers and punishes the laggards makes it much more likely that this transition will actually happen in the near future. Once any major economy gets the ball rolling, others will soon follow. And nations should be vying to be the first. My use of the UK as an example above is not random. The UK could easily be the first nation to make the transition to electronic money. Such a dramatic move would be easier to push through in a parliamentary system of government, with a powerful Chancellor of the Exchequer, than in the American system of government, replete with checks, balances, and gridlock. As Joe Weisenthal writes, the Bank of England has a creative incoming Governor in Mark Carney—who is now Governor of the Bank of Canada—and a Chancellor of the Exchequer willing to go outside the monetary policy box far enough to appoint a Canadian. The economy of the United Kingdom needs help. It is the mother country for modern economics as well as for American politics. There are many UK economists who can fully appreciate the opportunity the transition to electronic money would provide. This transition is in many ways a small one compared to the great monetary transitions of the past: paper money is just a way station on the road between barter and coins and a full embrace of the electronic money that is already a big part of our daily lives.

Canadians as the Voice of Reason on Financial Regulation

From Chrystia Freeland’s book Plutocrats, pp. 216-217:

The self-interested, and ultimately self-destructive, herd mentality on Wall Street and the City of London shaped policy around the world, but it didn’t prevail everywhere. One exception was Canada. Canadian regulators required their banks to hold more capital and permitted less leverage than their peers in London and New York. The result was no bailout of the Canadian financial sector and a recession (and budget deficit) that were much softer than in the United States. To this day, the Bank of Canada divides the world in to “crisis economies,” which means those whose banks failed, and everyone else, like Canada. 

Ottawa chose a different course because the government had a profoundly different attitude about its duties toward the system as a whole and its relationship with its bankers. As minister of finance in the 1990’s, Paul Martin laid the foundations for this approach…. “I knew there was going to be a banking crisis at some point and so did everyone else who has read any history. I just wanted to be damn sure that when a crisis occurred it wouldn’t occur in Canada, and that if it did occur internationally, Canada’s banks wouldn’t be badly sideswiped by the contagion.” …

“I think one of the things that happened was the great competition between New York and London pushed the two into more of a light touch in terms of regulation,” Martin recalled. “I remember talking to [the regulator] and we agreed that we were not prepared to take that approach. Light-touch regulation in an industry that was so dependent on liquidity didn’t make any sense." 

One Bay Street financier summed it up more saltily: "Canadian regulators didn’t have penis envy." 

… A Canadian finance executive who spent the 1990’s in Toronto, then moved to Asia, and now lives in London sheepishly recalls thinking: "Come on, guys, get in the game! The world’s changing." 

Plutocrats, pp. 252-254:

… in the fall of 2011, [Mark] Carney [who is now making the transition from being head of the Bank of Canada to being head of the Bank of England] became a protagonist in a central battle between the plutocracy and the rest of us–a crucial fight over the regulatory power of the state. 

… Carney was tipped to become the next head of the Financial Stability Board, a body of international regulators that comes closest to being the world’s banking boss. The FSB’s big job at the moment is refining and implementing new international bank capital rules. These regulations, known as Basel III, have taken on particular importance because a lack of capital in many U.S. and European banks was a central cause of the 2008 financial meltdown. …

Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan Chase, told Carney he thought the proposed Basel III rules were "cockamamie nonsense” In fact, the bank chief said, the rules ran counter to the national interest. “I have called it anti-American,” Dimon said, according to one participant. “The only reason I am calling it anti-American is because I am American. I also think it’s anti-European.” …

At first, Carney responded calmly: “I hear what you are saying. I don’t think it will surprise you that I am taking a different view. These are reasonable responses to the financial crisis.”

Anat Admati, Martin Hellwig and John Cochrane on Bank Capital Requirements

In the March 1, 2013 Wall Street Journal, John Cochrane had an eye=-opening review of The Banker’s New Clothes, summarizing the argument of authors Anat Admati and Martin Hellwig:

Running on Empty: Banks should raise more capital, carry less debt–and never need a bailout again.

It motivated me to buy the book and download it to my Kindle.

In Admati and Martin’s argument, as distilled by John, the first thing to understand is that capital requirements do not by themselves reduce the amount of funds available for lending; they are on the liability side, not the asset side: 

“Capital” is not “reserves,” and requiring more capital does not reduce funds available for lending. Capital is a source of money, not a use of money.

Moreover,

Capital is not an inherently more expensive source of funds than debt. Banks have to promise stockholders high returns only because bank stock is risky. If banks issued much more stock, the authors patiently explain, banks’ stock would be much less risky and their cost of capital lower. “Stocks” with bond-like risk need pay only bond-like returns. Investors who desire higher risk and returns can do their own leveraging—without government guarantees, thank you very much—to buy such stocks.

And yet, banks choose very high debt/equity ratios than other firms. What is going on? 

Nothing inherent in banking requires banks to borrow money rather than issue equity. Banks could also raise capital by retaining earnings and forgoing dividends,…

Why do banks and protective regulators howl so loudly at these simple suggestions? As Ms. Admati and Mr. Hellwig detail in their chapter “Sweet Subsidies,” it’s because bank debt is highly subsidized, and leverage increases the value of the subsidies to management and shareholders.

Equity is expensive to banks only because it dilutes the subsidies they get from the government. That’s exactly why increasing bank equity would be cheap for taxpayers and the economy, to say nothing of removing the costs of occasional crises.

Would high capital requirements inevitably gum up the works of banking? No:  

… it was not always thus. In the 19th century, banks funded themselves with 40% to 50% capital. 

How high should capital requirements be? Here is John Cochrane’s answer, which I second: 

How much capital should banks issue? Enough so that it doesn’t matter! Enough so that we never, ever hear again the cry that “banks need to be recapitalized” (at taxpayer expense)!

To be specific, I would say 50%. After all, equal amounts of equity and debt would not be an unusual debt/equity ratio for a non-banking firm that didn’t face a massive implicit subsidy from the likelihood of a bailout. Indeed, even the debt/equity ratios seen for non-banking firms are likely to tilt toward a higher debt/equity ratio than would be socially optimal as a result of the favorable tax treatment of debt relative to equity. (See Simon Johnson’s Congressional testimony on that point here.) And equal amounts of equity and debt did not constitute an unusual debt/equity ratio for banks in the era when the implicit bailout subsidy was not yet in place.

Top 10 Quartz Columns and Top 25 All-Time Posts as of February 12, 2013

The top 25 posts on supplysideliberal.com listed below are based on Google Analytics pageviews from June 3, 2012 through February 11, 2013. The number of pageviews is shown by each post. (There were 195,923 pageviews during this period, but, for example, 66,802 homepage views could not be categorized by post.) I have to handle my Quartz columns separately because that pageview data is proprietary. So there I am giving only the order in the Top 10 list immediately below. The list of top posts would be quite misleading without the inclusion of the Quartz columns. You might also find other posts you like in this earlier list of top posts, at this link.

Top 10 Quartz Columns, in Order of Popularity

  1. Why the US Needs Its Own Sovereign Wealth Fund
  2. Could the UK be the First Country to Adopt Electronic Money?
  3. Read His Lips: Why Ben Bernanke Had to Set Firm Targets for the Economy
  4. More Muscle than QE3: With an Extra $2000 in their Pockets, Could Americans Restart the U.S. Economy?
  5. How Paper Currency is Holding the US Recovery Back (How Subordinating Paper Money to Electronic Money Can End Recessions and End Inflation)
  6. Emotional Indicator: Obama the Libertarian? Americans Say They’d be Happy if Government Got Out of Their Way (Judging the Nations: Wealth and Happiness Are Not Enough)
  7. Yes, There is an Alternative to Austerity Versus Spending: Reinvigorate America’s Nonprofits
  8. John Taylor is Wrong: The Fed is Not Causing Another Recession
  9. Off the Rails: What the Heck is Happening to the US Economy? How to Get the Recovery Back on Track
  10. Obama Could Really Help the US Economy by Pushing for More Legal Immigration

Top 25 Posts on supplysideliberal.com:

  1.  Dr. Smith and the Asset Bubble 6054
  2.  Contra John Taylor 5266
  3.  Scott Adams’s Finest Hour: How to Tax the Rich 4043
  4.  Balance Sheet Monetary Policy: A Primer 3701
  5.  What is a Supply-Side Liberal? 2771
  6.  The Deep Magic of Money and the Deeper Magic of the Supply Side 2363
  7.  You Didn’t Build That: America Edition 2129
  8.  Trillions and Trillions: Getting Used to Balance Sheet Monetary Policy 2020 
  9.  The Egocentric Illusion 1896
  10. Two Types of Knowledge: Human Capital and Information 1839
  11. Books on Economics 1781
  12. No Tax Increase Without Recompense 1757
  13.  Why I am a Macroeconomist: Increasing Returns and Unemployment 1686
  14. Jobs 1636
  15. The Logarithmic Harmony of Percent Changes and Growth Rates 1623
  16. Getting the Biggest Bang for the Buck in Fiscal Policy 1600
  17. Scrooge and the Ethical Case for Consumption Taxation 1538
  18. Kevin Hassett, Glenn Hubbard, Greg Mankiw and John Taylor Need to Answer This Post of Brad DeLong’s Point by Point 1527
  19. The Shape of Production: Charles Cobb’s and Paul Douglas’s Boon to Economics 1522
  20. Is Taxing Capital OK? 1385
  21. Corporations are People, My Friend 1314
  22. Why Taxes are Bad 1275
  23. Avoiding Fiscal Armageddon 1274
  24. Thoughts on Monetary and Fiscal Policy in the Wake of the Great Recession: supplysideliberal.com’s First Month 1261
  25. Is Monetary Policy Thinking in Thrall to Wallace Neutrality?  1247

For those who want to find this post again, the “Top 25 posts in order of popularity” button at my sidebar will link to it until I make another post like this.

Miles on HuffPost Live: The Wrong Debate and How to Change It

Yesterday I was on HuffPost Live for the first time. I had a chance to make the case for electronic money and for Adam Ozimek’s idea of region-based visas. Here is the link again: “The Wrong Debate." 

There were a couple of things I wanted to make sure to get in, so I wrote a couple of notes beforehand. Here are those two notes:

  • We actually have two problems: the economic slump and the long-run debt problem. We need solutions to each problem that don’t make the other one worse. For that, we need new tools in the economic toolbox. The old tools won’t cut it. In my Quart column "What the heck is happening to the US Economy?” I propose some new tools. Just to tick off the names, to get to full economic recovery without making our debt problem worse, I propose in that column electronic money, Federal Lines of Credit, and US Sovereign Wealth Fund. To Solve our long-run debt problem in a way that achieves both the core Democratic and core Republican goals [and I should have added, does not throw the economy back into recession], I propose a Public Contribution Program. These are new ideas.
  • With two big exceptions, the Federal Reserve has actually steered the economy very well for the last few decades. Greenspan ignored the warnings of my colleague Ned Gramlich about the housing bubble and [the Fed as a whole] kept underestimating the problems [the housing bubble and its collapse] would cause. But that’s water under the bridge. The big problem now is that the Fed is afraid to lower short-term interest rates for fear of causing massive storage of paper currency. The Fed should be going to Congress today to ask for the authority it needs to deter massive storage of paper currency so it can cut short-term rates and bring the economy roaring back.  Because that involves making paper money subordinate to money in bank accounts, and making money in bank accounts “the real thing,” this is called “electronic money” in the blogosphere. But for most of the people, most of the time, it wouldn’t look any different from the way things are now.

Of course, these lines mutated when I was actually on the spot, but I did get a chance to say them in my first two at-bats.

I knew the question about immigration policy (my third bit) was coming, so I didn’t need to mention it in the first instance. And I was confident I could say what I wanted to about that more extemporaneously, since I was just coming off of Immigration Tweet Day.

Off the Rails: How to Get the Recovery Back on Track

Here is a link to my 14th column on Quartz: “Off the Rails: What the heck is happening to the US economy? How to get the recovery back on track." 

This column gives a better overall picture of my economic policy stance than any other single post so far. From the conclusion:


Franklin Roosevelt famously said:

The country needs and, unless I mistake its temper, the country demands bold, persistent experimentation. It is common sense to take a method and try it: If it fails, admit it frankly and try another. But above all, try something.

We at such a moment again. The usual remedies have failed. It is time to try something new. Any one of these proposals could make a major difference. In combination, they would transform the world.

Reaching for Yield: The Effects of Interest Rates on Risk-Taking

Evidence that the publisher Hay House thought that in 2006 people would be interested in “reaching for yield.” (No recommendation intended.) 

Many readers have misunderstood the following passage in my recent post “Contra John Taylor” about the effects of interest rates on risk-taking. I was responding to John Taylor’s following argument:

The Fed’s current zero interest-rate policy also creates incentives for otherwise risk-averse investors—retirees, pension funds—to take on questionable investments as they search for higher yields in an attempt to bolster their minuscule interest income.

What I wrote in response was this:

I can’t make sense of this statement without interpreting it as a behavioral economics statement about some combination of investor ignorance and irrationality and fraudulent schemes that prey on that ignorance and irrationality. The often-repeated claim that low interest rates lead to speculation cries out for formal modeling. I don’t see how such a model can work without some combination of investor ignorance and irrationality and fraudulent schemes preying on that ignorance and irrationality.

What I did not say clearly enough is that I have no problem believing that, indeed, investor ignorance and irrationality and schemes that prey on that ignorance and irrationality do indeed cause people to take on more risk as a result of low interest rates than they otherwise would. This is a genuine cost to the Fed stimulating the economy with low interest rates. But– especially once we figure out the details–it has much bigger implications for financial regulation than for monetary policy. I wanted to object to  John Taylor’s using “reaching for yield” to criticize current monetary policy without discussing the implications “reaching for yield” has for financial regulation. Regulation has serious costs, but so does tight monetary policy in the current environment. So either we need to live with the costs of “reaching for yield” or we need to consider the costs and benefits of various remedies. Let me add more investor education to the list of potential remedies. So as alternatives to living with the costs of “reaching for yield” we need to consider  

  • tighter monetary policy;
  • appropriate financial regulation;
  • more investor education.

To me, it seems clear that tighter monetary policy is the worst of these three options–not only because that would have a high change of causing another recession, but also because the effectiveness of tighter monetary policy in helping investors make better decisions is likely to be quite small. I would love to go with the third option of more investor education, but the costs of that option will only be manageable if effective educational interventions short of having everyone get a degree in finance can be found. That is not easy. (I am making no claim that a degree in finance would do the trick as an educational intervention, only that we would need something that is effective and costs less than having all investors get a degree in finance.)

I am serious in thinking it is important to develop formal models of “reaching for yield.” Let me give that explicitly as advice to Ph.D. students looking for dissertation topics. Here is tgmoe

A while back I replied to a blog on dissertation topics suggesting I was interested in topics in finance, but I never got around to providing detail. I will do so now. I am interested in the mutual fund industry and how individual households make investment decisions. The evolution of planned sponsors and other institutional investors in this environment is also intriguing and has significantly altered the manner in which households invest. Any thoughts would be greatly appreciated. Thanks, Todd

Answer: To me, modeling “reaching for yield” and testing your model and other models against data on individual investor decisions seems like a great topic for your research. I just storified a Twitter conversation that might be helpful. Here is the link:

Reaching for Yield.

In addition, let me suggest the following idea. Suppose someone wants to commit financial fraud–think Bernie Madoff. In a way that might itself be irrational, in the real world, low interest rates seem to be associated with investors expecting a low percentage of the value of an investment being paid back each year. If expectations for the percentage of the value of an investment that is paid back each year are low, it is much easier to hide financial fraud. By contrast, if after a few years start-up period, if people expect substantial dividends or other payments paid out, then it is harder to hide financial fraud. Another to put it is that in a Ponzi scheme, the rate at which one must find additional investors to defraud is lower when people don’t expect fast payback. In some models, the rate of expected payback is the real interest rate, but it is possible that in the world, it is  closer to the nominal interest rate. In any case, the details of the path over time at which investors expect to be paid back matters a lot for how long a fraudulent scheme can last. And the level of interest rates is likely to affect the payback path required by investors. 

A couple of final thoughts.  

  1. If “reaching for yield” when interest rates are low is a strong enough phenomenon, it should show up as a reduction in risk premia. But even if lower interest rates raised risk premia, it is quite possible that many individual investors could be taking on more risk as a result of low interest rates. In other words, the response of investors to low interest rates could vary a lot, and it is worth worrying about a maladaptive response to low interest rates by any substantial subgroup of investors, even if other investors react appropriately. 
  2. It is a much bigger step to say they are taking on too much risk, than just to say that they are taking on more risk as a result of low interest rates.

Update: Karl Smith just wrote a very interesting post asking the question, as I did in some of my tweets in Reaching for Yield:

By ‘Reaching for Yield,’ Do You Mean 'Demand Curves Slope Downwards’?

This is an important challenge to those arguing that low interest rates cause people to make mistakes in their decisions about which assets to invest in. Much of the evidence people point to when they talk about "reaching for yield” could be about perfectly rational responses to an increase in the risk premium. This rational response needs to be carefully distinguished from any claim that people are doing too much reaching for yield when interest rates fall–my point 2 just above. I may be more sympathetic than Karl to the idea that at least some people respond in maladaptive ways to low interest rates–enough to worry about. But the evidence is too thin to know how much of an issue this is once the rational response to higher risk premia is separated out.  

Let me explain a bit better what a fall in the safe interest rate does. Suppose there is some benchmark level of risk for which the expected average rate of return is unaffected. Then a reduction in the safe interest rate

  1. increases the reward to bearing risk, since the expected average rate of return of the benchmark level of risk is now further above the (now lowered) safe interest rate, and
  2. for anyone who chooses a level of risk below the benchmark level of risk, the expected average rate of return for their assets will be lower than before.  

The second consequence should be no surprise: in general, reductions in interest rates are a relief for borrowers but painful for savers. The pain for savers of lower interest rates is a topic for other posts. The issue for this  post is only if that pain drives some savers to make serious mistakes in their asset choices.

John Taylor is Wrong: The Fed is Not Causing Another Recession

Here is a link to my 13th column on Quartz: “John Taylor is wrong: The Fed is not causing another recession.” It is the two-paragraph précis of yesterday’s post “Contra John Taylor.”

Twitter provided some reviews of these two pieces that I liked. Here are a few:

Contra John Taylor

Having tweeted that John Taylor’s op-ed this morning, “Fed Policy is a Drag on the Economy” was “extraordinarily bad analysis,” I need to back up my view. Let me go point by point. Not all of John’s points are equally problematic.

1. Uncertainty about the effects of unwinding the Fed’s large asset positions in long-term government bonds and in mortgage-backed assets. John writes:

At the very least, the policy creates a great deal of uncertainty. People recognize that the Fed will eventually have to reverse course. When the economy begins to heat up, the Fed will have to sell the assets it has been purchasing to prevent inflation.

If its asset sales are too slow, the bank reserves used to finance the original asset purchases pour out of the banks and into the economy. But if the asset sales are too fast or abrupt, they will drive bond prices down and interest rates up too much, causing a recession. Those who say that there is no problem with the Fed’s interest rate and asset purchases because inflation has not increased so far ignore such downsides.

Unless the Fed is at the zero lower bound, its key tool is the federal funds rate that banks charge each other overnight. When it is time to raise rates above zero, the Fed can use movements in the federal funds rate–which have effects it understands from long experience. Although there is some uncertainty surrounding the exact size of the effects as the Fed unwinds its positions in long-term government bonds and mortgage-backed securities, the Fed is quickly gaining experience in that regard. More importantly, the overwhelming fact is that, when the short-term federal funds rate is held fixed the effects of balance sheet monetary policy on aggregate demand are small relative to the size of the positions involved, as I discussed in my post “Trillions and Trillions: Getting Used to Balance Sheet Monetary Policy.”

More polemically, it is worth pointing out that it is implausible for critics of Fed policy to say that (holding short-term rates fixed) changes in the holdings of long-term government bonds and mortgage-backed securities have no power to stimulate aggregate demand when the economy is in a slump, but going in the other direction, could have a dangerously powerful negative effect on aggregate demand once the economy is on the mend and asset positions are pulled back. The truth is that these effects were always likely to be modest in both directions, relative to the sizes of the assets purchases or sales involved. The power of balance sheet monetary policy is that these modest effects can be multiplied by huge movements in asset positions when necessary. But the very need to use huge movements in asset positions to get substantial effects should be reassuring when we contemplate unwinding those positions.

2. Low interest rates as fuel for speculation. Here, he says

The Fed’s current zero interest-rate policy also creates incentives for otherwise risk-averse investors—retirees, pension funds—to take on questionable investments as they search for higher yields in an attempt to bolster their minuscule interest income.

I can’t make sense of this statement without interpreting it as a behavioral economics statement about some combination of investor ignorance and irrationality and fraudulent schemes that prey on that ignorance and irrationality. The often-repeated claim that low interest rates lead to speculation cries out for formal modeling. I don’t see how such a model can work without some combination of investor ignorance and irrationality and fraudulent schemes preying on that ignorance and irrationality. (That is, I don’t see how the claim could hold in a model with rational agents and no fraud.) Whatever combination of investor ignorance and irrationality and fraudulent schemes preying on that ignorance an irrationality a successful model uses are likely to have much more powerful implications for financial regulation than for monetary policy. It is cherry-picking to point to implications of a not-fully-specified model for monetary policy and ignore the implications of that not-fully-specified model for financial regulation.

3. Low rates and zombie loans.

The low rates also make it possible for banks to roll over rather than write off bad loans, locking up unproductive assets. 

This is one of John’s best and most interesting points. It is a quirk of traditional loan contracts that the repayment rates expected by lenders are sometimes slower when nominal interest rates are low. This is a place where the free market should do its magic, with lenders making sure that the rates at which they are supposed to be repaid are adequate to help them identify badly-performing loans early on. The free market will get better at this the more experience businesses have with low nominal interest rate environments.

4. Political economy effects of low interest rates.

And extraordinarily low rates support and feed the spending appetites of Congress and the president, increasing deficits and debt.

As I wrote in “What to Do When the World Desperately Wants to Lend Us Money,” there are many ways that it is completely appropriate for the government to take low (real) interest rates into account in spending decisions. But that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t be worried about the long-run balance between taxing and spending. Bill Clinton explained the balance of short-run and long-run issues well when he said

Now, let’s talk about the debt. Today, interest rates are low, lower than the rate of inflation. People are practically paying us to borrow money, to hold their money for them.

But it will become a big problem when the economy grows and interest rates start to rise. We’ve got to deal with this big long-term debt problem or it will deal with us. It will gobble up a bigger and bigger percentage of the federal budget we’d rather spend on education and health care and science and technology. It — we’ve got to deal with it.

I actually think this point is well understood by policy makers, but I wish all of their constituents understood it better. In any case, tight monetary policy to make voters worry more about the national debt seems a strange alternative to educating the voters about the debt problem.

5. Issues of institutional design and what the scope of the Fed’s responsibilities should be.  

More broadly, the Fed’s excursion into fiscal policy and credit allocation raises questions about its institutional independence and accountability. This reduces public confidence in the central bank.

I agree with this statement. It is clear that there are important issues of institutional design for dealing with financial crises in order to preserve the public’s trust in institutions after the handling a financial crisis. I also interpret John’s statement as referring to ongoing balance sheet monetary policy, rather than just the emergency stabilization of the financial system-There I agree with this statement as well, as can be seen in my Quartz column “Why the US needs its own sovereign wealth fund.” In the absence of electronic money (on electronic money, see my post “Paper Currency Policy: A Primer”), purchases of a wide range of assets is crucial once short-term rates hit zero, but there is no reason the purchase of long-term or risky assets needs to be done by the Fed. Confidence in the Fed would be greater if unavoidably controversial assets were taken over by another agency–the US Sovereign Wealth Fund that I propose. As long as asset purchases by the US Sovereign Wealth Fund are sufficiently large, careful calibration of monetary policy can be left to the Fed, which would retain plenty of tools to avoid over-stimulation of the economy. This division of labor would allow the US Sovereign Wealth Fund to serve as a political lightning rod for the Fed, which in turn would help preserve the independence of monetary policy. 

6. Effects of US monetary policy on the monetary policy of other countries.

There is yet another downside. Foreign central banks—whether they like it or not—tend to follow other central banks’ easy-money policies to prevent their currency from appreciating sharply, which would put their exporters at a disadvantage. The recent effort of the new Japanese government to force quantitative easing on the Bank of Japan and thus resist dollar depreciation against the yen vividly makes this point. This global increase in money risks commodity booms and busts as we saw in 2011 and 2012.

Here is my perspective on this:

  • There is a global slump.
  • This calls for stimulative monetary policy globally.
  • Therefore, it is good that expansionary US monetary policy helps to inspire expansionary monetary policy by other countries. 

The effect of monetary stimulus on commodity prices is a very interesting phenomenon that deserves a better treatment at some later date, but is not a reason to avoid monetary stimulus when monetary stimulus is called for. 

7. Forward guidance as a price ceiling causing disequilibrium??? Finally, let’s turn to John’s most remarkable claim–the one that inspired my statement that his op-ed had “extraordinarily bad analysis.” John writes:

…a basic microeconomic analysis shows that the policies perversely decrease aggregate demand and increase unemployment while they repress the classic signaling and incentive effects of the price system.

Consider the “forward guidance” policy of saying that the short-term rate will be near zero for several years into the future. The purpose of this guidance is to keep longer-term interest rates down and thus encourage more borrowing. A lower future short-term interest rate reduces long-term rates today because portfolio managers can, in a form of arbitrage, easily adjust their portfolio mix between long-term bonds and a sequence of short-term bonds.

So if investors are told by the Fed that the short-term rate is going to be close to zero in the future, then they will bid down the yield on the long-term bond. The forward guidance keeps the long-term rate low and tends to prevent it from rising. Effectively the Fed is imposing an interest-rate ceiling on the longer-term market by saying it will keep the short rate unusually low.

The perverse effect comes when this ceiling is below what would be the equilibrium between borrowers and lenders who normally participate in that market. While borrowers might like a near-zero rate, there is little incentive for lenders to extend credit at that rate.

This is much like the effect of a price ceiling in a rental market where landlords reduce the supply of rental housing. Here lenders supply less credit at the lower rate. The decline in credit availability reduces aggregate demand, which tends to increase unemployment, a classic unintended consequence of the policy.

Research presented at the annual meeting of the American Economic Association this month by Eric Swanson and John Williams of the San Francisco Fed is consistent with this view of credit markets. It shows that during periods of forward guidance, the long-term interest rate does not adjust to events that shift supply or demand as it does in normal periods. In addition, while credit to corporate businesses is up 12% over the past two years, credit has declined to noncorporate businesses where the low rate is more likely to be a disincentive for lenders. Peter Fisher, head of fixed income at the global investment-management firm BlackRock and a former Fed and Treasury official, wrote in September: “[A]s they approach zero, lower rates … run the significant risk of perversely discouraging the lending and investment we need.”

This is just wrong. To the extent that forward guidance has bite, the Fed is promising to shift the demand curve for assets in the future and thereby get to a particular equilibrium interest rate. This is not at all like rent control. The right analogy is, say, New York City getting rents to come down by reducing making it easier to get a building permit, or by subsidizing the building of new apartments. The Fed is pushing asset prices up and interest rates down by a combination of  buying assets now and promising to buy them in the future. There is a world of difference between a market intervention in which the government contributes to supply and demand and a price floor or ceiling. By buying assets, and promising to buy them in the future, the Fed is lowering an equilibrium interest rate. The details of the pattern of buying assets and promising to buy them in the future tends to keep the equilibrium interest rate at a certain level.

The fact that the Fed acts by changing the equilibrium interest rate matters, because John’s claim that lowering the interest rate will reduce the quantity of investment would hold only if what the Fed is doing really did act like an interest rate ceiling that makes asset demand lower than asset supply. But what the Fed is doing is adding to asset demand; the equilibrium between the quantity supplied and the quantity demanded continues to hold.  To translate into the effect on loans for construction, the purchase of equipment and consumer durables, or to fund startups, strong asset demand contributes to the supply of loans, both because banks issue assets to raise money for loans and because loans can  be packaged into assets. Anyone issuing and selling assets to raise funds can sell them much more easily when demand for assets is strong. Currently, the Fed is contributing in important ways to the demand for assets now and the expected demand for assets in the future. This makes loans easier and stimulates investment in buildings, equipment, etc.  

The bottom line is that it leads to very bad policy analysis if Fed asset purchases and promises of future asset purchases are mischaracterized as the kind of interest rate ceiling that leads to disequilibrium. Interest rate ceilings come in two types:

  • interest rate ceilings that cause the supply of assets on the seller side (representing borrowing) to exceed the demand for assets on the buyer side (representing lending);
  • interest rate “ceilings” that come from a commitment to buy as many assets as it takes to keep the equilibrium interest rate down at a certain level.   

John Taylor confuses these two types of interest rate ceilings.

 

Update: Also see "Contra Randal Quarles." 

How a US Sovereign Wealth Fund Can Alleviate a Scarcity of Safe Assets

In a number of recent posts, I have defended the idea of a US Sovereign Wealth Fund:

In this post, I wanted to give a different angle on a benefit of a US Sovereign Wealth Fund. A number of economists have stressed the importance of having a robust supply of assets that can easily serve as collateral. In addition to discussing electronic money in “Overcoming the Zero Bound on Interest Rate Policy,” Marvin Goodfriend has a good discussion of balance sheet monetary policy, in which he discusses the concept of “broad liquidity services”:

I define liquidity broadly as a service yield provided by assets according to how easily they can be turned into cash, either by sale or by serving as collateral for external financing. Liquidity services defined broadly are valued because they can be used to minimize one’s exposure to the external finance premium in the sense of Bernanke and Gertler (1995).

Assets considered safe are particularly valuable in this regard, so much so that Yichuan Wang argues that Federal Reserve purchases of long-term treasury bonds has not been ideal:

These purchases of treasuries have been problematic for the shadow banking sector, notably the oft maligned money market funds, as the purchases have drained the financial system of safe collateral

In his January 16, 2013 post “Safe Assets and Government Debt,” Simon Wren-Lewis makes the point especially well:

The financial system, partly as a result of the entry of emerging markets, has a large and increasing desire for safe assets. This led, before the recession, to low real interest rates (supply and demand: if the demand for an asset rises faster than its supply, the return from it will fall): this was the topic of Bernanke’s savings glut story. (In terms of monetary policy, it influences what theory calls the natural interest rate, which is the medium term reference point for policy.) In an effort to satisfy this growing demand, the private sector attempted to create its own safe assets through securitisation and the like. This failed spectacularly, and we got a financial crisis. Only governments with their own central bank can create really safe assets. So we need more, not less, government debt.

… is the distinction between net and gross debt important here? Suppose a government did reduce its long term need to raise taxes by reducing its net debt position, but did this by buying assets rather than reducing its gross debt. Obviously by holding private sector assets it increases its exposure to macro shocks, but it retains its ability to cover those through either taxation or money finance, so its gross debt may remain safe.

If the government issues more safe assets, (based on its relatively large capacity to bear risks) it must do something with the proceed. The basic options are 

  1. government spending
  2. buying other safe assets
  3. buying risky assets

The size of our net national debt argues against adding any more to government spending than we absolutely have to. Buying other safe assets does not increase the total supply of safe assets available to the private sector at all, but only changes the type of safe assets available. In my view, the standard way for the government to increase the overall supply of safe assets available to the private sector is for the government to buy risky assets. Hence, my proposal for a US Sovereign Wealth Fund.

Side note: I have had some correspondence suggesting that a US Sovereign Wealth Fund would be unavoidably corrupt. I would be very interested in learning more how well Norway’s sovereign wealth fund has done in that regard, but that proposition does not seem right to me;  I have not heard of big scandals involving portfolio managers of large endowments such as the endowments for Harvard or Yale or the University of Michigan, which seem good analogues for many aspects of a US Sovereign Wealth Fund. I am much more worried about congress meddling in the details of what the US Sovereign Wealth Fund does, which is why I think independence comparable to the Fed’s is crucial.

Libertarianism, a US Sovereign Wealth Fund, and I

In reaction to my Quartz column “Why the US Needs Its Own Sovereign Wealth Fund” (which I followed up with “Miles’s First TV Interview: A US Sovereign Wealth Fund” and “Miles Kimball, David A. Levine, Robert Waldmann and Noah Smith on the Design of a US Sovereign Wealth Fund.”), I received this question:

Question: 

Chris Lindsay Advocating another government agency? The “libertarian” label that I see/hear people put on you is being tested. Heh.

Answer: 

There are really two questions here: (A) “Am I a Libertarian?” and (B) “How can I square my proposal for a US Sovereign Wealth Fund with a concern for freedom and the consequences of too much government power for freedom?”

(A) Philosophically, I am much closer to being a Utilitarian than a Libertarian. Given that, how is it that I sound as much like a Libertarian as I do?

  • First, I believe that people love freedom–and hate being under someone else’s thumb–so freedom should be very important to a Utilitarian. I discuss evidence for human beings’ love of liberty and hatred of oppression in my post “Judging the Nations: Wealth and Happiness are Not Enough,” which expands on my Quartz column “Obama the libertarian? Americans say they’d be happy if government got out of the way.”
  • Second, I love freedom myself. I think about freedom a lot when I am writing posts.  Typing in the word “freedom” in the search box at my sidebar will lead you to an interesting set of posts that back up this claim. One of the most memorable things I heard from my peers in grade school was “It’s a free country”–a statement that always had, in context, a clear practical meaning. To me “It’s a free country” means that anyone who wants to tell me to do something has the burden (sometimes easy, sometime hard) of persuading me that is what I should do. 
  • Third, I believe that freedom has enormous instrumental value in furthering all of our other interests. Freedom of thought fosters science. Freedom of speech fosters better government. Freedom in making economic decisions fosters prosperity. 

However, the statement that freedom in making economic decisions fosters prosperity must be qualified if there is theft, deception or violence, and it must be qualified if there is serious internal conflict or a lack of understanding on the part of the decision-maker.

One area where I am not Libertarian at all is in the regulation of food and drink, where I think most of us face serious internal conflict–one part of each of us wanting to do one thing, the other part another thing. Of course, any benefits of such regulation need to be weighed against my first point–the simple fact that people love freedom and hate being under someone else’s thumb–often even when they believe it is for their own good. And the administration of rules often attracts as functionaries those who like to boss others around–something that makes an abridgment of freedom even more painful.   

(B) Now, let’s judge a US Sovereign Wealth Fund against a concern for freedom. All a US Sovereign Wealth Fund does is buy risky assets, financed by the issuance of Treasury bills and Treasury bonds. (Think in terms of an initial fund of $1 Trillion, financed by the issuance of Treasury bill and Treasury bonds.) The US Sovereign Wealth Fund does not tell anyone, other than its employees, what to do. It would not have the same political pressures to undercharge customers and overpay employees (and thereby lose money) as other government enterprises. Indeed, I am much more worried that political pressure would cause the US Sovereign Wealth Fund to underpay its key employees. Rather than costing money as government spending does and thereby leading to higher taxes, a US Sovereign Wealth Fund would most likely make money for the government, and thereby allow lower taxes. Since higher taxes are a serious blow to freedom, anything likely to reduce them is–at least on that account–a plus for freedom. 

Notice that a US Sovereign Wealth Fund reduces the temptation to dream up additional government spending to take advantage of the very low interest rates at which the US government can borrow. We should indeed borrow more to take advantage of low real interest rates, but we should weigh carefully whether we should be spending more or putting those borrowings to work in the asset markets.   

“Fairness” to Firms. Some financial firms will dislike a US Sovereign wealth fund because it would act, in effect, as a competitor. They would say it unfair that they have to compete with an institution that can borrow at such a low rate. But which is more fair–to have all taxpayers share in some of the benefits of the rich return to risk available in asset markets, or to have a much smaller share of the population take all of the benefit through the financial firms, often costing taxpayers directly when they need bailouts? And none of this fairness discussion has anything directly to do with freedom.

Limiting the Influence of Politics on the US Sovereign Wealth Fund. I have discussed in previous posts how, in order to insulate the US Sovereign Wealth Fund from political pressures to invest in particular companies or industries, it is important that it have a level of independence comparable to (but separate from) the Federal Reserve. A board with long, staggered terms would hire and fire the portfolio managers, with a dual mandate to make a good return for taxpayers and to contribute to financial stability through a contrarian investment strategy and through having a staff with deep financial expertise. 

But there is one other key issue for a US Sovereign Wealth Fund I haven’t yet addressed. To avoid backdoor regulation, it is important to have a structure that limits the influence of politics on how the shares owned by the US Sovereign Wealth Fund are voted. When I first thought of this, I was inclined to totally prohibit shareholder voting by the US Sovereign Wealth Fund. But banning all voting could hurt returns, as when it is time to vote for a takeover that would significantly raise the value of shares. So here is my proposal. The Federal Reserve System has industry input through the boards of the regional Federal Reserve banks. Suppose we created a system where pension fund managers with broadly diversified portfolios would have representation on a council that would decide on how the US Sovereign Wealth Fund’s shares were voted. They would have no other formal role in the US Sovereign Wealth Fund. With broadly diversified portfolios like the broadly diversified portfolio of the US Sovereign Wealth Fund, their interests in raising their own returns should be reasonably consistent with taxpayers’ interests in earning a higher return. The head of the US Sovereign Wealth Fund would serve on this council on the voting of shares, in order to allow some coordination with the portfolio decisions and financial stability concerns of the US Sovereign Wealth Fund, but none of the other members of the governing board of the US Sovereign Wealth Fund would serve on the council on the voting of shares.  

Miles's First TV Interview: A US Sovereign Wealth Fund

Here is a link to my first TV interview. It was about my proposal for a US Sovereign Wealth Fund.

This interview was sparked by my Quartz column “Why the US Needs Its Own Sovereign Wealth Fund.”

The primary motivation for having a US Sovereign Wealth Fund is to give the Fed running room for monetary policy. (Its establishment is a powerful balance sheet operation–more powerful than quantitative easing with long-term government bonds or mortgage backed securities.) But I think there are other benefits of a sovereign wealth fund as wealth fund:

  1. making money for the taxpayer, 
  2. contributing to financial stability both directly by a contrarian investment strategy and indirectly through the financial expertise of its staff, and 
  3. serving as a political lightning rod to draw political controversy away from the Fed.

The Overton Window

A while back, I was intrigued by Chris Dillow’s mention of the “Overton window” in his post “Fiscal Policy and the Overton Window.”

Wikipedia defines the Overton window as follows:

The Overton window is a political theory that describes as a narrow “window” the range of ideas that the public will find acceptable, and that states that the political viability of an idea is defined primarily by this rather than by politicians’ individual preferences.[1]It is named for its originator, Joseph P. Overton,[2] a former vice president of the Mackinac Center for Public Policy.[3] At any given moment, the “window” includes a range of policies considered politically acceptable in the current climate of public opinion, which a politician can recommend without being considered too extreme to gain or keep public office.

The set of ideas politicians feel they can talk about in turn limits the range of ideas that are considered relevant policies for typical political debates. As a result, a great deal of political discussion is about a very narrow range of policies. One of the most important ways that the blogosphere can contribute to the political debate is by talking about attractive policies that politicians are not talking about. That makes those policies more familia–and so safer for politicians to talk about–thereby expanding the Overton window.

I have proposed a many policies that are currently not a big part of the political discussion in our country. It is my hope that additional discussion of these ideas in the blogosphere can expand the Overton window to encompass them as genuine political possibilities. Here are a few, with links:

  1. Electronic Money as a Way to Eliminate the Zero Lower Bound on Monetary Policy
  2. A Public Contribution System as an Alternative to Tax Increases
  3. Federal Lines of Credit as an Alternative to Tax Rebates
  4. A US Sovereign Wealth Fund to Give the Fed Running Room
  5. A Constitutional Amendment to Limit Government Spending to Less than Half of GDP
  6. A Dramatic Increase in Legal Immigration
  7. Year-Round Schooling

For proposals that are more nearly within the bounds of current political debate, see my post “Within the Overton Window,”

Note: This post, plus “Within the Overton Window” constituted a list of "save-the-world posts.“ My most current list of "save-the-world posts” is “Making a Difference: Save-the-World Posts as of December 3, 2013." 

An earlier list of "save-the-world” posts can be found in

My Platform, as of September 24, 2012,

and still earlier in  

Miles’s Best 7 “Save the World Posts,” as of July 7, 2012.

Q&A on the Financial Cycle

Question: eloquentwhimsy asked you:

What do you make of Claudio Borio’s new working paper (“The financial cycle and macroeconomics: What have we learnt?”), in particular the idea of needing to model money as an active rather than “frictional” factor and the importance of debt and credit cycles (which is similar to Hyman Minsky’s work)? In particular, the idea that private sector debt-reduction should be the most important part of any solution to the recession has long struck me as the ultimate reason to see policies like yours (Federal Lines of Credit) as the future of Government stimulus which ultimately should seek to empower households and firms to pay down their debts. There are two primary benefits to this: cutting out the middleman of stimulus projects and eliminating “multiplier” estia.

Answer: It took me a long time to think through this one. I found Claudio Borio’s paper very interesting. Here are some thoughts:

  1. A great deal of our current trouble is due to the zero lower bound on nominal interest rates. I think electronic money is the most straightforward way to get more aggregate demand and allow us to return to the natural level of output. 
  2. I am intrigued by your argument that Federal Lines of Credit, as described in my post “Getting the Biggest Bang for the Buck in Fiscal Policy” and in my short-run fiscal policy sub-blog http://blog.supplysideliberal.com/tagged/shortrunfiscal might also be helpful in balancing the economy in our current situation, even if we did have electronic money. Certainly, in the absence of electronic money, Federal Lines of Credit would help immensely, both to create additional aggregate demand and to reduce the most troublesome components of household debt. I have always thought that an important benefit of Federal Lines of Credit would be making households feel more secure so that they would spend more, even if a household does not actually need to draw on its Federal Line of Credit at all.   
  3. Claudio emphasizes the effects that the financial cycle has on the natural level of output. It occurred to me that my belief in a relatively high intertemporal elasticity of labor supply (see “What is a Supply-Side Liberal?”) indicates that the natural level of output might fluctuate quite a bit in response to financial phenomena. I am imagining, for example, a model that combines the irrational expectations of noise-trader models with the kind of machinery in models of “news shocks” such as Robert Barsky’s and Eric Sims’s “News Shocks and Business Cycles.”
  4. In relation to point 3, it is worth noting that, believing as I do that the elasticity of intertemporal substitution for consumption is below 1 and that income and substitution effects for labor supply are of roughly the same size, permanently higher rate of return expectations should lower labor supply, not raise it. To have the increase in labor supply necessary to have an irrational financial boom raise the natural level of output, either or both (a) the increased rate of return needs to be perceived as temporary–which is very interesting in this context–or (b) the increased risk could cause precautionary saving in the form of increased labor supply as well as reduced consumption.
  5. The bottom line I would emphasize is that research on financial dynamic stochastic general equilibrium models–including those that have irrational elements–needs to be brought together with research on business cycle dynamic stochastic general equilibrium models. As a step in that direction, a greater fraction of financial dynamic stochastic general equilibrium models should include elastic labor supply.