I have three recommendations for readers interested in central banks and monetary policy. First, my classmate Jeremie Cohen-Setton has started a new blog (together with Tishani Dorfmeister) called 
ECB Watchers. This blog is great for anyone who watches the Fed too, because the comparative analyses of ECB and Fed policies are quite illuminating. In particular, they have good insights into why the ECB and the Fed will each face serious but different challenges with 
forward guidance. They explain how the differences stem in part from the 
Trichet doctrine, which basically holds that non-standard monetary policy measures can “
be determined largely independently” from
 conventional measures. They add:
The intellectual case for such a separation 
became more fragile, however, as the ECB introduced another set of 
non-standard measures (LTROs, covered bond programme, Securities Markets
 Programme and, should it be implemented, the Outright Markets 
Transactions), which implicitly addressed the second category of 
problems. By and large, the ECB has remained very shy with measures 
affecting the structure and risk premia problems (which it consistently 
saw as bordering fiscal policy) in comparison to the Fed and other 
central banks. 
This relative timidity for touching the risk and term premia can be 
understood in a multi-country context where monetary policy would 
inevitably have important distributional consequences. But ECB officials
 often overplay this aspect. The ECB has eventually been forced to 
venture in this field and is nervously attempting to rationalize and 
justify these interventions ex post by explaining that the specific set 
up of the euro area and in particular the risks of financial 
fragmentation justified such an approach (see speech by Benoit Coeure
 at the Banque de France). But this argument is anachronic, because the 
ECB’s non-standard measures largely predates the financial fragmentation
 along national boundaries or redenomination risks (covered bond 
programme, SMP) and because the institutional set up cannot be a 
sufficiently good reason for the ECB not to undertake what its mandate 
and its fiduciary duty towards European citizens call for.
My second recommendation is a speech by Fed Governor Sarah Bloom Raskin called "
Beyond Capital: The Case for a Harmonized Response to Asset Bubbles." Unfortunately, since she gave the speech on the same day as Chairman Ben Bernanke's 
testimony on July 17, the speech was under-covered. The 
bit of 
coverage that the speech has had mostly just notes that she thinks 
regulation can stem asset bubbles. But it actually has quite a bit more content. The mechanics of asset bubbles-- why and how they form and grow-- is not clearly understood. But Governor Raskin provides a much clearer and more coherent discussion than I have seen in any previous central banker speech (and I have read quite a lot of them!) Here's a long excerpt-- I'm thrilled to see a central banker actually putting this many words into explaining precisely what they mean by an asset bubble before saying what they want to do about it.
It used to be
 believed that asset bubbles emerged spontaneously, or perhaps came from
 sunspots or other mysterious causes. Now we know more and we know 
better, and, while we may not be able to predict bubbles, we understand 
them to be a product of particular actions and choices by financial 
institutions and their regulators.
Here is one way a bubble might start. And, to approximate current
 economic conditions, we'll assume an environment of interest rates that
 have been low, and continue to be low, for a long time. To start, 
retail investors may become dissatisfied with their low yields and begin
 to seek higher yields by purchasing some specific higher-yielding 
asset. If investors have access to credit, they might try to raise the 
return on their money by funding a greater portion of their purchases 
with debt. The asset purchased could serve to collateralize their loan. 
If many investors employ this strategy and they borrow to invest in the 
same asset, the price of that asset, and perhaps the prices of closely 
related assets as well, will increase noticeably faster than the 
historical trend.
At the same time, increased demand for credit to finance these 
asset purchases could lead lenders to increase their reliance on less 
expensive, unstable short-term funding, such as uninsured deposits, 
commercial paper, or repo transactions, in order to fund the loans.
Besides meeting customers' growing demands for credit, financial 
intermediaries may themselves decide to "reach for yield" and take on 
additional risk in a low interest-rate environment. Banks suffering 
compressed net interest margins because of low long-term interest rates,
 money market funds facing an earnings squeeze, insurance companies that
 had promised minimum rates of return on their products, and others may 
all begin to take on higher interest rate risk, market risk, liquidity 
risk, or credit risk in search of higher returns. 
If these conditions seem likely to continue, an initial rise in 
the asset's price leads to expectations of further increases, which adds
 to investor demand, spurring further borrowing and credit growth and 
increased household and financial sector leverage, which, in turn, could
 drive asset prices still higher. Rising asset prices, in turn, would 
increase the value of borrowers' collateral, allowing still further 
borrowing. 
For loans collateralized by an asset whose price is rising, 
lenders believe they can rely for repayment more on the appreciation of 
the asset and collateral and less on the borrower's repayment ability. 
Lenders relax their underwriting standards, such as minimum requirements
 for borrower down payments, credit scores and credit history, or 
required maximum debt-to-income ratios. To compete for loans to buy or 
to hold the appreciating asset, or financial assets related to it, 
financial institutions could also decrease the margins and haircuts that
 usually protect them from asset price declines. 
Financial institution decisions to relax underwriting and impose 
less-stringent margins and haircuts will further increase the pool of 
potential borrowers and their borrowing capacity, further increasing 
credit growth and supporting still higher asset prices, but, at the same
 time, will also increase lenders' credit risks and exposure--as secured
 creditors--to a decline in the asset's price. Ultimately, the asset 
becomes severely overvalued, with its price untethered from economic 
fundamentals. We would then have on our hands a full-blown, 
credit-fueled asset bubble. 
And, as we experienced in the financial crisis, when a bubble 
involving a widely-held asset bursts, the consequent plunge in asset 
prices can seriously impair the balance sheets of households and firms. 
Indeed, a dramatic decline in the price of a significant asset can 
reduce household wealth, spending, and aggregate demand. When such 
effects on wealth, credit availability, and aggregate demand are large 
enough, the real economy can suffer a significant recession. And, of 
course, lower employment and incomes further depress asset prices and 
borrowers' ability to repay loans, with further adverse effects on 
financial institutions and their ability to extend credit. 
At this point, some financial institutions may have become nearly
 insolvent. And this, coupled with their increased reliance on 
potentially unstable short-term funding, could make them more vulnerable
 to sudden losses of public confidence. 
Such a loss of confidence, in turn, makes it impossible for 
affected institutions to roll over existing debts or extend new credit, 
and may force deleveraging that requires selling illiquid assets quickly
 and cheaply in asset fire sales, resulting in further declines in asset
 prices. Such developments further threaten the solvency of financial 
institutions and intensify credit contraction, depriving households and 
businesses of financing. A loss of confidence that is 
institution-specific could spread, causing other institutions to 
experience their own heightened solvency risks, liquidity problems, and 
need to de-lever through asset sales. 
My third recommendation is an old (in blogosphere terms) post by Nick Rowe called "
Is money a liability?" I came across it because I'm teaching undergrads about the central bank balance sheet this week (as Rowe was too when he wrote the post.)
    
Nice post. Really enjoy it.
ReplyDeleteJust one point, Nick Rowe's stuff is just a restatement of MMTers' point.
Of course money is a liability. Cash is a zero interest bearing liability of the government. Coincidence the USD has lost virtually all of its purchasing power since the inception of the Federal Reserve system??
ReplyDeleteInflation expectations needed to be included in any model of assets bubbles. One of the reasons to use debt is the expectation that the debt will be repaid in much cheaper dollars in the future, while the nominal value of the asset will rise.
ReplyDeleteNow if inflation rises as expected, the speculator makes money.
If inflation doesn't rise, he may still make money, so long as other buyers (greater fools) still expect asset prices to rise further.
But at some point the divergence between actual inflation and the rise in asset prices becomes so great that the lower than expected income from the assets can no longer cover the debt service.
At that point, forced sellers can no longer find buyers and the bubble deflates (and the debt used in the bubble must be written off.)
What's fascinating to me is that the central banks are now using predictive modeling methods in order to see into the future and make sound decisions. We're in a new age of big data, very exciting to see where this takes us.
ReplyDelete