This is a title that is sure to spur some angry comments.
Didn’t the financial crisis prove that mainstream macroeconomics was hopelessly
flawed, that the ‘Great Moderation’ (fifteen or so years of relatively stable
inflation and output) that preceded the crisis was a sham, or worse still a
cause of the crisis, and basing policy on lots of maths and rational
expectations has been totally discredited?
One of the architects of that macroeconomic mainstream is Lars Svensson. He wrote a number
of key papers on inflation targeting using lots of maths and rational
expectations. Probably for that reason, he was a member of Sweden’s equivalent
of the Monetary Policy Committee from 2007 to 2013. By the middle of 2009
Swedish short term interest rates were, like most other places, close to their
‘zero lower bound’ - in this case 0.25%. But in mid 2010 they began to rise
again, reaching 2% at the end of 2011. The primary motivation for this continuing rise in
rates was a concern that Swedish consumers were taking on too much debt.
Svensson fiercely and publicly opposed these increases, and
eventually left the central bank in frustration. He argued that there was still plenty of slack in
the economy, and raising rates would be deflationary, so that inflation would
fall well below the central bank’s target of 2%. By the end of 2012 inflation
had indeed fallen to zero, and since then monthly inflation has more often been
negative than positive. It was -0.4% in September. This week the Swedish
central bank lowered their interest rate to zero.
OK, so one eminent macroeconomist got a forecast right. Plenty
of others get their forecasts wrong. Why the big
deal? Suppose you took the statement in my first paragraph seriously. The Great
Moderation was about central banks having an explicit forward looking target
for inflation, and varying interest rates with the aim of trying to achieve it.
So if the success of that policy was a sham or worse, and had been exposed by
the financial crisis, a central bank should not worry too much if they abandon
it. They should certainly not worry if they deviate from it because of concerns
about the financial health of the economy. Which is exactly what the Swedish
central bank did.
Now Sweden has negative inflation, and interest rates have come
right back to zero. Deviating from what mainstream macroeconomists in general
advocate (and what one in particular recommended) has proved a costly mistake.
(Svensson estimates it has cost 60,000 jobs.) So maybe
the story with the financial crisis is a little more nuanced. Perhaps good
monetary policy, aided by the analysis of mainstream New-Keynesian theory, did help bring about the pre-crisis moderation
in inflation and output variability. The Achilles heel was that monetary policy
lost traction when nominal rates hit zero, but a number of mainstream macroeconomists had
discussed the implications of that possibility before it happened in 2009. In the UK at least (and also elsewhere), it was politicians
and central bank governors that did not take the consequences of this
possibility seriously enough. The financial crisis suggests that what was
missing was better financial regulation (including macroprudential monetary
policy tools), rather than a need to rewrite how we set interest rates.
I am certainly not claiming that mainstream macroeconomics is
without fault, as regular readers will know (e.g.) However it is important to recognise the
achievements of macroeconomics as well as its faults. If we fail to do that,
then central banks can start doing foolish things, with large costs in terms of
the welfare of its country’s citizens. And while it might appear unseemly to occasionally blow
one’s own profession’s trumpet, I suspect no one else is going to.