I am tired of reading discussions of helicopter money (HM) that have
the following structure:
-
HM is like a money financed fiscal stimulus
-
HM would threaten central bank independence
-
So HM is a bad idea
(Admittedly here (3) is only implicit.) What these discussions never seem to ask, even when discussing (2),
is why we have independent central banks (ICB) in the first place.
And what they never seem to note, even in establishing (1), is that
ICBs deny the possibility of a money financed fiscal stimulus (MFFS).
ICBs exist to avoid problems when politicians do macro stabilisation.
But creating an ICB means
that a MFFS is no longer possible. It could only happen through
ICB/government cooperation, which would negate independence. But
proponents of ICBs say this is no problem, because macro
stabilisation can be done entirely by using changes in interest
rates, so a MFFS is never going to be needed.
Then we hit the Zero Lower Bound. Unconventional monetary policy
(e.g. QE) is a far more uncertain and unreliable stabilisation tool
than fiscal policy. Which means ICBs cannot do the job there are
required to do, and their existence prevents a MMFS.
To then say no problem, governments can do a bond financed fiscal
expansion is to completely forget why ICBs were favoured in the first
place. Politicians are not good at macroeconomic stabilisation. If
you had any doubt about that, global austerity should be all the
proof you need.
So demonstrating (1) does not, I repeat not, imply that ICBs do not
need to do HM. Implying that it does is a bit like saying governments
could set interest rates, so why do we need ICBs. Most
macroeconomists would never dream of doing that, so why are they
happy to use this argument with HM?
Which brings us to (2). Now (2) is never in my experience examined
with the same rigour as (1): it seems almost that just mentioning
‘fiscal dominance’ is enough to frighten the horses. The only
circumstances I can see where (2) would be true is if, following HM
and a subsequent upswing, the central bank finds that it runs out of
assets to sell in order to keep rates high and prevent inflation
exceeding its target. One obvious solution is for the government to
recapitalise the central bank.
Does that compromise central bank independence? The Bank of England
does not think so. It got the government to agree to make good any
losses from QE. Have people worried that this compromises the
independence of the Bank of England Of course not: no one can
seriously imagine a UK government ever reneging on this commitment.
So why would HM be any different?
Let me put it another way. Imagine the set of all governments that
would refuse a request from an ICB for recapitalisation during a boom
when inflation was rising: - governments of central bank nightmares.
Now imagine the set of all governments that, in a boom with inflation
rising, would happily take away the independence of the central bank
to prevent it raising rates. I would suggest the two sets are
identical. In other words, HM does not seem to compromise
independence at all.
So please, no more elaborate demonstrations that HM is equivalent to
a MFFS, as if that is an argument against HM, without even noting
that ICBs prevent a MFFS. No more vague references to HM threatening
independence, without being precise about why that is. And please
some recognition that the whole point of ICBs is not to have to rely
on governments to do macro stabilisation.