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James K. Galbraith thinks Chairman Jerome Powell will get credit for a decline in US inflation that would have happened anyway

Public Policy / opinion
James K. Galbraith thinks Chairman Jerome Powell will get credit for a decline in US inflation that would have happened anyway
Jay Powell waving

According to economist Kenneth Rogoff of Harvard University, “a growing crescendo of commentary places the blame for the current surge in US inflation squarely on the Federal Reserve.” His reference is to a leader in The Economist, which blames America’s central bank not for the inflation itself, but for failing to raise interest rates sooner and more harshly than it finally did, on May 4.

Rogoff disagrees with this judgment, and I sympathize with his argument, up to a point. There is a distinction between price increases driven by supply disruptions, oil shocks, and war, on the one hand, and the additional heavy costs that often follow from sustained campaigns of high interest rates: bankruptcies, unemployment, and financial chaos. Being reluctant to inflict the second set of costs on top of the first set is the mark of a reasonable, non-sadistic public servant. The Economist disapproves, but Rogoff and I do not.

Beyond that, however, Rogoff’s logic is hard to follow. He seems to suggest that the Fed was intimidated by America’s oh-so-powerful progressive movement, which was in thrall to a Stony Brook University professor (and lifelong academic) named Stephanie Kelton.

That idea is not totally implausible. With a sharp pen and a quick wit, Kelton is a skilled debater and policy polemicist. Her ideas, advanced under the rubric of Modern Monetary Theory, are drawn partly from such titans as John Maynard Keynes, Abba Lerner, and Hyman Minsky. But, more than that, they stem from close and accurate observations of actual central bank practice. They are partly prescriptive, to be sure; but their prescriptive force is rooted in a realism that makes MMT accessible to policymakers and thus truly dangerous to the monetary mystics of Harvard, Chicago, Princeton, and MIT.

Still, there is scant evidence for Rogoff’s claim that MMT “had many influential adherents in politics and the media.” None is cited. While a New York Times profile of Kelton this February was indeed a breakthrough (causing conniptions in Cambridge), it hardly establishes that MMT held sway at the Fed back in early 2021.

Moreover, Rogoff acknowledges – correctly – that “respected centrists” like Olivier Blanchard of the Peterson Institute for International Economics had also argued against premature credit tightening.

He also makes a passive-voice reference to “helicopter money,” giving the impression that this idea is uniquely affiliated with MMT. Yet those of us with long memories would sooner associate the concept with Milton Friedman and Ben Bernanke, a moderate Republican who was appointed to chair the Fed by President George W. Bush, and who deployed helicopter money à outrance in response to the 2008 financial crisis. Rogoff even mentions his own argument for a more expansionary, pro-inflation monetary policy in 2019.

Thus, by Rogoff’s own account, opposition to early anti-inflation hysteria was not a fringe view. Rather, it was one of those rare points on which the left and many eminent members of the mainstream roughly agreed.

As for the Fed’s own economists, Rogoff concedes the possibility that when “price growth accelerated in late 2021, … [they] really thought inflationary pressures were temporary.” Yes, this is possible. After all, the first round of post-pandemic oil price hikes was over by June, along with the big jump in used-car prices, which had been driven by a semiconductor shortage that stalled production of new cars.

Under the circumstances, the central bank’s sensible technicians might well have expected price stability to return (at the new levels). Perhaps they didn’t realize the political pressure that would build on their bosses, partly fueled by Ivy-League loudmouths, when the media kept the old news in the headlines, month after month. Unlike unemployment or the GDP reports, inflation numbers are published on a 12-month rolling basis, which meant that the price jumps from early 2021 kept on making news. Having delivered headlines about “record inflation” for almost a full year since they occurred, they are only now on the verge of fading from the numbers.

Nor could a sensible technician have reasonably forecast the oil price spike to $130 per barrel that occurred in early March. That, too, will sustain sensational headlines for a while, even though the price increase itself has already been mostly reversed.

In any case, the Fed has now acted, raising interest rates by half a percentage point. That is the largest incremental increase in 22 years, though it is not, by itself, an economic earthquake. The timing is possibly brilliant. With negative real GDP growth in the first quarter of 2022, fiscal stimulus is obviously finished for now, and there is no prospect that any more will be enacted. With the 2021 price spikes finally passing from the 12-month window, and with oil back down a bit, there is a chance that those technicians on Team Transitory (if they existed) will be proven right after all. 

If so, they won’t get any credit. Instead, that will go to Chairman Jerome Powell for waving his magic wand. The inflation hawks and the moneylenders will applaud the Wizard of Oz maneuver, claiming that they were right all along. The only grumbling will be among all the farmers, the small-business people, the indebted, and the unemployed.


*James K. Galbraith, Chair in Government/Business Relations at the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs at the University of Texas at Austin, is a former executive director of the congressional Joint Economic Committee. Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2022, and published here with permission.

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5 Comments

Good to see #TeamTransitory is still clinging on. Even a stopped clock is right twice a day so eventually they'll be able to say "We told you so."

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Which of the following do you consider permanent and immovable features of the macroeconomy? The supply chain effects of Covid-19? The war in Ukraine? The legacy of Milton Friedman?

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I get the feeling interest rates in the real world have peaked for this cycle. The US 10 year Treasury was at 3.1% a few days previously, and US 30 yr fixed mortgages at 5.5%. The US 10 yr note over the long run tracks about 0.6% above the Fed Funds rate. So at present real world interest rates are priced for a Fed Funds rate of 2.5%. The only rising interest rates from now likely will be the rates banks lend money to each other overnight, ie Fed Funds rate.

I expect a rapid deceleration in inflation over the next 6 months. As supply changes improve, the world economy rapidly slows, and we stop getting quarter over quarter increases in commodity prices. NZ looks primed to have a recession, though a falling NZ dollar will like prevent outright deflation.

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The inflation is driven by the inability of supply chains to cope with various lockdown policies and the current commodity bull market driving up the input prices for manufacturing. The logistics chain breakdown, due to the extremely globalised economy chain alongside consolidated industries exerting oligopoly pricing, means we have inflation.

Central banks drove asset price inflation, which has been an intentional policy for the last decade or more. You could literally predict the huge upswing in the Stock Market and Housing by thinking through the implications of MV=PQ. Money supply was inflated enormously using QE, but because of the Cantillion Effect, the money was simply pumped into assets. It didn't touch consumer pricing and therefore was not considered 'inflation'.

The mismeasure of inflation by ignoring asset price inflation is coming home to roost. Dropping QE and raising interest rates is going to utter devastate the low gravity economy of zombie firms making money with low yielding projects. The irony is higher interest rates correlate with greater increases in productivity because firms will only borrow to invest in projects which have a yield greater than the cost of interest on the capital borrowed.

Economics is genuinely just a priesthood for worshipping the economy, as if not sacrificing enough lives to the stock market each day will prevent the sun from rising.

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The FED waves its "Magic" wand ? Could be much more waving of it to come if you ask me, it looks broken.

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