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Deflation, Globalization and The New Paradigm of Monetary Economics. Joseph E. Stiglitz Ministry of Finance April 16, 2003 Tokyo. Problems with traditional keynesian macroeconomics. Not based on micro-foundations
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Deflation, Globalization and The New Paradigm of Monetary Economics Joseph E. Stiglitz Ministry of Finance April 16, 2003 Tokyo
Problems with traditional keynesian macroeconomics • Not based on micro-foundations • In 70s, concern was that behavior could not be deduced from hypotheses of rational actors maximizing utility or profits • Focused on problems arising from price rigidities • In 70s, problem was inflation • Today, many countries are worried about deflation • Even in 30s, assumption of price and wage rigidity not convincing
Monetary theory based on transactions demand for money especially problematic • Money not needed for most transactions (credit used for most) • Most money is interest bearing • Opportunity cost of ‘money’ (difference between interest rate on CMA accounts and T-bills) simply determined by transactions cost, unrelated to economic activity • Most transactions trades in assets and not directly related to income generation • Relationship between two not stable over business cycle • Seeming instability of velocity –Led to end of monetarism in most countries.
Empirical puzzles and problems (I) • Relative stability of real interest rates • Little evidence of effect of real interest rates on investment (US) • Considerable evidence of effects on nominal interest rates • Investment equations in which cash flow and net worth appear significant
Empirical puzzles and problems (II) • Host of anomalies and questions • Inventory – pro-cyclical rather than anti-cyclical • Exports often do not seem to increase as much as one would have expected after large devaluations (East Asia Crisis) • Movements of real product and consumption wages over business cycle • Why some shocks get amplified –standard theory predicts economy should dampen shocks • Why the effects of some shocks seem so persistent
Advances in economic theory • Imperfect and asymmetric information leading to imperfections in product, labor and capital markets • Systematic ‘irrationalities’ in behavior (Kahnemann and Tversky)
Two solutions • New classical, real business cycle theory • New keynesian theories
Why new classical and real business cycle theories failed? (I) • Assumed away problem of unemployment • More broadly, ignored mounting theory and evidence concerning imperfect and asymmetric information and irrationalities • Cannot have asymmetric information with representative agent • Stock market behavior exhibits irrational exuberance and pessimism, herd behavior, etc (Shiller and others)
Why new classical and real business cycle theories failed? (II) • Host of corporate, accounting, and banking scandals in US and Europe related to imperfect information, significant macroeconomic effects • Most of results had nothing to do with rational expectations, but depended on perfect market assumptions • With market imperfections, rational expectations may increase efficacy of government policy, not diminish it (Neary-Stiglitz) • Rested on implausible assumptions • Major source of disturbances are technology shocks • Economy randomly becomes less efficient!
Two branches of new ‘keynesian’ economics • Rigid wages and prices • But wages and prices not rigid • And menu cost theories of explanation of price rigidities unpersuasive • Efficiency wage theories (Shapiro-Stiglitz) do help explain real rigidities, but not nominal rigidities • Fisher debt deflation theories • Developed by Greenwald and Stiglitz, based on asymmetric information and asymmetries in speeds of price adjustment
Basic elements of theory (I) • Credit rationing and equity rationing (imperfections of capital markets limit use of equity markets in raising new funds) mean that: • Firms act in a risk averse way • Firm balance sheets matter –for production, investment, employment, all decision • Firm cash flows matter • Household and government balance sheets and cash flow also matter
Basic elements of theory (II) • Focuses on supply side as well as demand • Since production is risky (and risk cannot be fully divested) shocks to economy can affect willingness to produce, especially relevant in small open economies which in principle should face a close to horizontal demand for their products –demand should not be a problem
Basic elements of theory (III) • Supply of credit can be a critical constraint • Demand and supply intertwined • Demand shocks in one period have consequences for supply in subsequent periods • Adverse effects on firm balance sheets lead to lower production • Adverse effects on bank balance sheets lead to lower credit supply • Redistributions (e.g. caused by large price changes) matter because of important non-linearities • Losses to those who are worse off may lead to greater reduction in aggregate demand than the offsetting increases by those who are better off
New monetary paradigm (I) • Based on supply of credit (loanable funds) • Based on bank (and other) intermediation • Information problem • Ascertaining credit worthiness • Monitoring and enforcing loan contracts • Banks are ‘firms’ that engage in these credit services • Entails risk bearing • Willingness and ability to perform service depends on balance sheet
New monetary paradigm (II) • Theory focuses on how (1) shocks to the economy and (2) policy (both macro-policy and regulatory policy) affect banks’ (and others’, including firms’) ability and willingness to provide credit • Regulatory policy has macro-economic effects • Theory pays special attention to bankruptcy, credit interlinkages among firms (as important as standard general equilibrium product and factor interlinkages)
New paradigm provides a framework for thinking about deflation and alternative policy responses • Deflation, particularly unexpected deflation, leads to real balance sheet effects which can adversely affect aggregate demand • This is in addition to traditional real interest rate effects
Globalization has led to some deflationary bias • Closer integration could mean ‘deflationary contagion’ –in any case, policies in other countries have major effects • More competition • Global reserve system means that substantial global income is simply ‘buried’ in reserves every year • Focus on inflation limits ability of expansionary monetary policy to offset – stability pact puts deflationary bias in Europe • Sum of trade surpluss equal sum of deficits, but there is asymmetric policy response: pressure on deficit countries to reduce deficits, with constraints on devaluation (fear of inflation) and trade policy, reducing income is only instrument in short run
Prescription (I) • Theory suggests focus on balance sheets • Shifting from deflation to inflation may help balance sheets –undoing damage that deflation has done in increasing real value of debt • But some institutions with a maturity mismatch may find their balance sheet hurt –may need to have inflation or interest rate puts • Shifting from deflation to inflation may lead to lower real interest rates
Prescription (II) • On average, devaluation will also improve Japan’s balance sheet, given its large creditor status • And will help to reduce deflation • This is in addition to normal trade benefits from devaluation • Conventional way of correcting bank balance sheet shifts problem from banks to government • But there are unconventional ways which provide as accurate a picture of the true change in government’s position as conventional method
Specific policies: limited efficacy of standard keynesian instruments (I) • Income tax cuts may be ineffective, if individuals think they are temporary • Or even if they are believed to be permanent, they may simply be used to ‘restore’ balance sheet • Temporary consumption tax cut more likely to be effective, since the fact that it is temporary is more incredible than the claim that the income tax is permanent, and such a tax has an intertemporal substitution effect • But still may have limited effect
Specific policies: limited efficacy of standard keynesian instruments (II) • Spending financed by borrowing stimulates the economy • But leaves the country in debt • Worsening government’s balance sheet • Could set in motion bad dynamic • Households may worry about the future tax increases
Key Questions • How to devalue, how to reverse deflation? • Possible solution: Financing some of deficit spending by printing money • No evidence of discontinuity: moderate amount will not set off rampant inflation • Advantage over debt finance: not treated as a liability • Can be used to help recapitalize banks, enabling them to lend more • Strategy was tried in Sweden in Great Depression - worked
Important Lesson • Even if this prescription works, it will not address Japan’s longer run problems • Failure to use innovations in manufacturing elsewhere in the economy, especially in the service sector • Unless, however, Japan does something about the continuing short run lack of aggregate demand, there is a real risk of exacerbating long run problem, as financial problems mount and investments in new technology wane.
General conclusions • Need for a new macro-theory, new paradigm for monetary economics • New theory provides better explanation of a host of phenomena • Most importantly, new theory provides insights into how to think about a variety of policy issues