Japan’s short term
interest rate set by its central bank has been near zero since the
mid-1990s. The UK’s equivalent short interest rate has been near
zero since 2009, and the Eurozone’s since 2014. This in turn
reflects core inflation being well below its target rate in Japan and the
Eurozone over the same period. [1] This is not how it is meant to be.
And because the short term interest rate in the US is above zero, it
is not getting the attention from a US-centric macroeconomic
community that it should.
We all know about
interest rates hitting the lower bound after the GFC. But
macroeconomic theory is quite clear. Governments can always, just
always spend their way out of such a trap. The reasoning is simple.
If the government cutting taxes and spending more on public services
was not at some point inflationary, then why are we not having both?
There must be a point at which demand exceeds supply by enough to
make inflation meet its target.
I’ve often heard
an objection that fiscal stimulus is not appropriate because these
countries no longer have an output gap. But the output gap is
difficult to measure. If these countries really did have a zero
output gap, then why is inflation below target? Inflation, not the
output gap, is the ultimate constraint on whether fiscal stimulus is
needed. [2] If inflation is stuck below target and your measure of
the output gap says that gap is zero, you should ignore the output
gap measure and enact a fiscal stimulus.
So why has this not
happened in Japan, or the UK, or the Eurozone? The answer has to be
that for some reason governments in those countries have not done
what they should have done, and therefore wasted a lot of resources
that could have gone to their citizens. It takes quite a lot to
convince governments not to spend when they should and to tax when
they need not. So what is this force that stops these governments
spending their way out of the interest rate lower bound trap?
There are three
candidates I can think of.
The first is what I
call the consensus assignment. The idea that monetary policy, and
only monetary policy, can be used to stabilise the economy to hit the
inflation target. It was the macroeconomic policy consensus until the
GFC. It left governments unused to dealing with stabilisation
themselves, because they had contracted out the problem to the
central bank.
But this cannot
explain it all. After all, all three countries/zones have used fiscal
policy to expand the economy after the GFC, and Japan on many
occasions. So something else must be inhibiting these countries from using fiscal policies by enough.
The second candidate
is something that came with the consensus, and that is ‘deficit
bias’. When interest rates controlled the level of inflation (and,
contrary to MMT thinking, they were pretty effective at doing this
job) many governments tended to allow government debt to gradually
rise, for reasons that are hardly complicated. Rules were created and
then institutions set up to prevent this happening. It may be that
too many governments have internalised the idea that deficit bias is
bad and therefore it is good to run down debt.
Of course that idea
only makes sense when the consensus assignment is operating, and it
does not apply when interest rates are stuck at their lower bound.
When rates are stuck at around zero we need to reverse the assignment
and use fiscal policy to stabilise the economy until rates are well clear of their floor. But
perhaps some governments fail to see that and still think it is good
for them to be reducing debt.
To be honest I think this might apply
to officials working for governments (including central bank
governors), but not to politicians themselves. Officials who had
learnt their economics when the consensus assignment was dominant and
never read the footnotes (if they were there) about the interest rate
lower bound. But that still matters, because officials play a big
part in advising politicians. In particular, officials helped design
a currency union which has no contingency for situations where
monetary policy is ineffective.
The third and final
reason is a phobia about government debt. Now there are good economic
reasons why building up a large stock of government debt relative to
GDP may have unfortunate side effects, but they all operate when the
interest rate on government debt exceeds the growth rate (r > g
for short). High government debt can crowd out private investment by
raising interest rates, but inadequate demand is much more effective
at suppressing investment and rates cannot be crowding out investment
when they are at their floor! In short, the economic reasons
for worrying about government debt fall aside at the lower bound. [3]
Now perhaps public
officials and some others are influenced by the economic case against
high debt to GDP and fail to see that it does not apply when interest
rates are at their lower bound. But I think there are two more
important reason for deficit phobia. The first comes from watching
countries get into serious difficulties, and often resorting to the
IMF, because they could no longer finance their debts. But this
concern does not apply to a currency issuer whose debts are in their own currency, as Japan, the Eurozone
and UK all are. However I suspect officials can be a little
economical with the truth about this when it suits them (see the UK
2010 Coalition negotiations for example).
The second reason
for debt phobia is ideological. Debt phobia is a means of keeping a
lid on the size of the state. We see this in its most blatant form in
the US from the Republican Party, but I think it is powerful
everywhere. This is particularly the case under neoliberalism, where a key goal is reduce many activities of the state so taxes can be cut for the already well off.
The importance of
this cannot be overemphasised. Two major economies and one economic
block are wasting resources that could have gone to their citizens
because of some all all of these factors. And perhaps even more
importantly, they and other countries like the US are wide open to a negative demand shock creating a
recession without effective [4] tools being ready to combat it.
[1] The UK is
complicated by two large currency depreciations, but once you take
out their effect everything here applies equally to the UK.
[2] With a Phillips
curve, the only reason inflation can remain below its target besides
deficient demand is if people and firms think the real target is below the
official target. But if that is the problem, then policy makers
should increase demand and inflation to show this is not true.
[3] Some may worry
that high deficits will be difficult to wind down once we are off the
lower bound. But a good fiscal stimulus is temporary, so this should
not be a problem.
[4] Quantitative Easing is not a reliable tool.