Tuesday, June 2, 2015

Max Headroom -oom -oom -oom

Max Headroom. From Wikimedia Commons.

John Cochrane reasons through the idea of the Fed raising rates now-ish to create "headroom" to fight a future downturn. His arguments about linear models are pretty logical. Raising rates will hurt the economy as much as future drop will help, ceteris paribus, so maybe there is a path dependence effect that saves you ... but maybe not.

I'd just like to add the information transfer model view. What follows assumes the IT model is true -- it may be wrong, so you should add that caveat to what is said below.

Basically, monetary policy has little to no effect on the US macroeconomy except as a possible source of coordination because it's in a "liquidity trap". However that coordination effect can be sizable (essentially limiting how much the fall in NGDP is due to non-ideal information transfer/market failure/panic). All of the impact of QE or interest rates is almost entirely short term and emotional at this point.

Whether one should raise rates now would be based on a few considerations:

  1. Would the rise trigger an immediate recession?
  2. Would the future rate cut help a future recession?

If we look at the US growth path in NGDP-M0 space, we can see that we're not terribly off the curve so the worst we could expect from a rate rise is something on the order of the 2001 "recession":


Regarding the second question, yes it could help shave off some of the non-ideal bit and possibly arrest the panicked coordination of market actors. But this should be compared to the alternatives -- another round of QE at the ZLB could just as easily arrest the fall.

So overall, a rate hike probably won't be the end of the world, but we don't actually need it. In my job, I occasionally do risk analysis. The risk of a rate hike is moderate -- there is a low probability of a high impact (bad) result. However, the benefit is low at a fairly high probability since there are other options (namely QE) and you loose the option to invest in infrastructure with all that free money.

Raising rates seems like a bad choice in the end.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Comments are welcome. Please see the Moderation and comment policy.

Also, try to avoid the use of dollar signs as they interfere with my setup of mathjax. I left it set up that way because I think this is funny for an economics blog. You can use € or £ instead.

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.