Mainly for
economists
In his further
thoughts
on DSGE models (or perhaps his response to those who took up his
first thoughts), Olivier Blanchard says the following:
“For conditional forecasting, i.e. to look for example at the effects of changes in policy, more structural models are needed, but they must fit the data closely and do not need to be religious about micro foundations.”
He suggests that there is wide agreement about the above. I certainly
agree, but I’m not sure most academic macroeconomists do. I think
they might say that policy analysis done by academics should involve
microfounded models. Microfounded models are, by definition,
religious about microfoundations and do not fit the data closely. Academics are taught in grad school that all other models are flawed
because of the Lucas critique, an argument which assumes
that your microfounded model is correctly specified.
It is not only academics who think policy has to be done using
microfounded models. The core model used by the Bank of England is a
microfounded DSGE model. So even in this policy making institution,
their core model
does not conform to Blanchard’s prescription. (Yes, I know they
have lots of other models, but still. The Fed is closer
to Blanchard than the Bank.)
Let me be more specific. The core macromodel that many academics
would write down involves two key behavioural relationships: a
Phillips curve and an IS curve. The IS curve is purely forward
looking: consumption depends on expected future consumption. It is
derived from an infinitely lived representative consumer, which means
Ricardian Equivalence holds in this model. As a result, in this
benchmark model Ricardian Equivalence also holds. [1]
Ricardian Equivalence means that a bond financed tax cut (which will
be followed by tax increases) has no impact on consumption or output.
One stylised empirical fact that has been confirmed by study after
study is that consumers do spend quite a large proportion of any tax
cut. That they should do so is not some deep mystery, but may be
traced back to the assumption that the intertemporal consumer is
never credit constrained. In that particular sense academics’ core
model does not fit Blanchard’s prescription that it should ‘“fit
the data closely”.
Does this core model influence the way some academics think about
policy? I have written
how mainstream macroeconomics neglected before the financial crisis
the importance that shifting credit conditions had on consumption,
and speculated that this neglect owed something to the insistence on
microfoundations. That links the methodology macroeconomists use, or
more accurately their belief that other methodologies are unworthy,
to policy failures (or at least inadequacy) associated with that
crisis and its aftermath.
I wonder if the benchmark model also contributed to a resistance
among many (not a majority, but a significant minority) to using
fiscal stimulus when interest rates hit their lower bound. In the
benchmark model increases in public spending still raise output, but
some economists do worry about wasteful expenditures. For these
economists tax cuts, particularly if aimed at those who are
non-Ricardian, should be an attractive alternative means of stimulus,
but if your benchmark model says they will have no effect, I wonder
whether this (consciously or unconsciously) biases you against such
measures.
In my view, the benchmark models that academic macroeconomists carry
round in their head should be exactly the kind Blanchard describes:
aggregate equations which are consistent with the data, and which may
or may not be consistent with current microfoundations. They are the
‘useful models’ that Blanchard talked
about in his graduate textbook with Stan Fischer, although then they
were confined to chapter 10! These core models should be under
constant challenge from both partial equilibrium analysis, estimation
in all its forms and analysis using microfoundations. But when push
comes to shove, policy analysis should be done with models that are
the best we have at meeting all those challenges, and not models with
consistent microfoundations.
[1] Recognising this point, some might add some ‘rule of thumb’
consumers into the model. This is fine, as long as you do not
continue to think the model is microfounded. If these rule of thumb
consumers spend all their income because of credit constraints, what
happens when these constraints are expected to last for more than the
next period? Does the model correctly predict what would happen to
consumption if the proportion of rule of thumb consumers changes? It
does not.