Category Archives: Macroeconomic policy

Larry Summers Warns of "Deepening Crisis"

While a number of analysts, investors, and commentators have said for some time that the credit crisis is serious and is likely to damage the real economy, the only views that the Fed takes seriously are those of highly regarded economists, fellow regulators, and senior industry executives (oh, and of course, that of Fed futures […]

Read more...

China Launches Price Freeze

Do you remember “Whip Inflation Now,” Gerald Forf’s program to reduce inflation by exhorting consumers to spend less? WIN buttons, part of a public awareness campaign, quickly came to symbolize the cluelessness of the Ford Administration. The Chinese are about to learn Ford’s lesson the hard way. Rampaging domestic inflation has led the government to […]

Read more...

Fed Policy Too Expansive on Its Own Terms

In an interesting Brookings Institution paper (hat tip Greg Ip at the WSJ Economics Blog), former Federal Reserve economist Douglas Elmendorf looks at the question of whether monetary policy in the run-up to the credit contraction was too loose. However, he argues that the impact wasn’t great enough to have caused the housing bubble: Let […]

Read more...

Krugman Savages Greenspan’s Revisionist History

Alan Greenspan made the mistake of resorting to a tired and increasingly ineffective move from the Bush playbook. Specifically, tell a big lie long and loudly enough, and quite a few people will come to believe you. But in Greenspan’s case, this tactic may be backfiring. Greenspan seems to have forgotten that some of the […]

Read more...

John Kay on Central Bank Independence

Faithful readers, I have looked around quite a bit tonight, but I am not coming up with much grist for blogging. Yes, there is a Wall Street Journal front page story that tells us that homebuilders are putting up smaller houses. And there is some chat everywhere about OPEC’s small production increase, one that the […]

Read more...

Robert Reich Uses the R Word

Robert Reich’s latest post, “The Way to Prevent the Looming Recession.” argues that monetary policy won’t prevent the coming recession and therefore policy makers need to consider tax cuts: With the economy heading for recession, all eyes are on Ben Bernanke and the Fed, and the question everyone is asking is how much the Fed […]

Read more...

"The Fed versus the financiers"

Below are some excerpts from a good piece by Kenneth Rogoff on the Guardian’s website, which discusses why Bernanke thinks the Fed has no business worrying about asset prices, but argues that the lousy quality of macroeconomic data means policy makers ought to consider the information embedded in market prices: A bit of intellectual history […]

Read more...

Housing Remedy: Employer of the Last Resort?

Financial Times columnist Wolfgang Munchau, in “Prepare for the credit crisis to spread,” tells us that the credit crunch is likely to get worse, since credit problems will spread to credit card receivables and car loans, both of which are typically securitized, and collateralized loan obligations (read takeover debt) also look shaky. Munchau argues that […]

Read more...

Nouriel Roubini on the Instability of Bretton Woods 2

The Bear Stearns/CDO drama has taken attention away from other worrisome conditions in the economy, and the biggest one is “global imbalances,” which is shorthand for the US running continuing, large current account deficits that are financed for the most part by foreign central banks, particularly those of China, Japan, and Saudi Arabia. We’ve lived […]

Read more...

Martin Wolf on Savings Glut Vs. Money Glut Hypotheses

Martin Wolf, in a Financial Times comment, “Villains and victims of global capital flows,” looks at the two competing theories of the causes of global imbalances. One is the savings glut story, in which parsimonious Chinese and Japanese force the US to consume to keep the world from falling into recession. This view is favored […]

Read more...

Central Bankers Taking More Interest in Money Supply

We have been muttering on this blog for some time that the powers that be should take more interest in money supply, and it appears that European central bankers are coming around to our point of view. David Altig in “Putting The Money Back In Monetary Policy” at Macroblog has a very useful, detailed without […]

Read more...

Money Supply, Inflation, and the Emperor’s (i.e., Central Banker’s) Nakedness

The Financial Times on Monday had two stories on inflation, one a lengthy story, the other a a comment, “The problem with inflation indices,” by Gideon Munchau, triggered by the fact that the Bank of England missed its inflation targets of 2% by over a percentage point (their Consumer Price Index increased at an annualized […]

Read more...