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Monday, April 9, 2012

MMT-MM Smackdown: Scott Sumner vs. Dan Kervick

      For a long time I've been saying this is the grudge match we've been needing. Now we got it. Sumner wrote a post in response to a post Dan wrote last week that questioned Krugman's call for more inflation.

       http://www.themoneyillusion.com/?p=13846#comments

       Kervick's post

       http://neweconomicperspectives.org/2012/04/the-political-path-to-full-employment.html

        I read him originally at the above link but you can also see him at Naked Capitalism

        http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2012/04/dan-kervick-contra-krugman-why-increasing-inflation-is-not-likely-to-increase-employment.html

        See Krugman here http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/06/opinion/krugman-not-enough-inflation.html?partner=rssnyt&emc=rss

        Here is the original Krugman quote that Kervick takes issue with:

        “For one thing, large parts of the private sector continue to be crippled by the overhang of debt accumulated during the bubble years; this debt burden is arguably the main thing holding private spending back and perpetuating the slump. Modest inflation would, however, reduce that overhang — by eroding the real value of that debt — and help promote the private-sector recovery we need. Meanwhile, other parts of the private sector (like much of corporate America) are sitting on large hoards of cash; the prospect of moderate inflation would make letting the cash just sit there less attractive, acting as a spur to investment — again, helping to promote overall recovery.”

         Kervick argues:

       "I believe this is the wrong approach. The Fed’s ability to boost employment is very limited, well-intentioned citations of the Fed’s full employment “mandate” notwithstanding. Rather than looking to central bankers and the banking system to accomplish a task for which they are not really cut out, we should turn our attention back toward fiscal policy as the primary tool for bringing the country up to full employment and keeping it there. And rather than seeking engineered inflation as the mechanism for boosting spending and employment, we should implement the MMT job guarantee proposal to achieve full employment and price stability at the same time."

        "I believe this is the wrong approach. The Fed’s ability to boost employment is very limited, well-intentioned citations of the Fed’s full employment “mandate” notwithstanding. Rather than looking to central bankers and the banking system to accomplish a task for which they are not really cut out, we should turn our attention back toward fiscal policy as the primary tool for bringing the country up to full employment and keeping it there. And rather than seeking engineered inflation as the mechanism for boosting spending and employment, we should implement the MMT job guarantee proposal to achieve full employment and price stability at the same time."

       "Krugman’s two main arguments for the beneficial results of inflation are questionable. First, he argues that inflation will help reduce private sector debt overhang. But inflation only reduces debt overhang in a significant way for households who are fortunate enough to see their nominal wages rise along with the general rise in prices. In today’s economy, workers are frequently not so fortunate."

      "Suppose you work 40 hours a week for $1000 of take home pay, and you have a weekly debt bill of $500 and a weekly consumption bill of $500. So you work 20 hours for debt repayment and 20 hours for consumption. Now let’s suppose prices rise by 5%. Then the same basket of consumption goods you purchased before for $500 now costs you $525. Your debt bill, which is fixed in nominal terms, remains $500 per week."

      "Suppose also that your employer does not give you a raise, but chooses to take advantage of the inflation by keeping your nominal wages right where they were at $1000 per 40 hours. Then the result will be that you will have to decrease your real consumption by 4.7%. You will continue to work 20 hours for debt repayment and 20 hours for consumption, but now your consumption will be lower in real terms."

      "This worry about employers’ behavior is a real one. We don’t live in the old days of strong unions and the wage-price spiral that existed when economists like Krugman were cutting their teeth. We live in a permanent buyers’ market for labor characterized by persistently high unemployment and minimal worker bargaining power. As prices rise, many people’s nominal wages stay fixed or lag well behind the price level increase. Real wages go down and ordinary folks feel the sting of higher prices without the benefits on debt relief."

       "Doubts can also be raised about Krugman’s claim that people respond to inflation by increasing their propensity to spend their income. The idea is that in an inflationary environment, one is losing money just by holding money, so to the degree people expect higher inflation their incentive to spend rather than save increases. But while this behavioral response sounds plausible in theory, it might not be how people actually behave in practice. Instead, people worried about having to pay higher prices in the future and attempting to maintain a stable level of real expenditures over time might cut back on expenditures now to save for the expected higher prices."

       "Here’s a homework assignment for economics students out there. Explain Kervick’s argument using an AS/AD model. You will quickly see that it only makes sense if you assume the inflation was created by reduced AS. If it was caused by increased AD, then real GDP would have increased along with prices (assuming the AS curve is not vertical, and I can’t imagine an MMTer making that assumption.)"

       "Krugman is obviously calling for the Fed to create higher prices via more AD, not less AS."

      Sumner then reiterates an assertion he makes quite often: "Never reason from a price change." Indeed, the name of his post is "More reasons to stop talking about inflation."

      Sumner also took issue with Dan quoting him disapprovingly with regards to a recent Tyler Cowen post:

     "Yes, there are some people who still believe America’s workers are overpaid! In a recent post, Scott Sumner approvingly quotes Tyler Cowan, who has argued both against public sector hiring and for lower real wages. Cowan said, “the greater the number of protected service sector jobs in an economy, the more likely those citizens will oppose inflation. Inflation brings the potential to lower real wages, possibly for good.” Sumner then argued that Cowan’s considerations are a strong argument for favoring monetary policy over fiscal stimulus."

    Sumner comes back with this:

     "My post said nothing about wages, and I certainly didn’t endorse lower wages. (Although you wouldn’t know that by clicking on the link, because it doesn’t link to my post. I wonder why?) I was arguing that we shouldn’t aim for a higher inflation rate, but rather for higher NGDP. I thought MMTers also favored higher NGDP, I guess at least one does not."

      UPDATE: Dan says it was a mistake that the link wasn't working and it should work now.

      Dan does reply in the comments section:

      "How does this address my point about real wages Scott. My point was simple. If consumer prices go up while the nominal wages for a given class of people stay where they are, then there real wages go down. That point is independent of the cause of consumer price increase, and holds even if prices rise due to a boost in AD and GDP. Are you saying that people’s nominal wages will rise automatically along with prices and GDP?"

       "Dan, The effect of inflation on real incomes completely depends on whether it’s demand or supply side inflation. “Never reason from a price change.” If it’s higher aggregate demand, then any rise in prices occurs precisely because AD shifted right, which means real incomes also rise (Unless SRAS is vertical.) Are you assuming SRAS is vertical?"

         So who wins this argument? I will leave it for you to decide for now for I'm not entirely sure what I make of it all. I haven't really fully decided.  My feeling is that in a quick recovery, inflation is at least associated with it. Depressions and deep recessions like 1932 and 2008 are associated with deep asset deflation like Fisher and Minsky talk about.

        In 2009 we saw deflation and deep deflation in 1929-32. Certainly during this recessions we have heard way too much worry about inflation-Kervick is right that Krugman is right about criticizing the inflation hawks. However he argues:

        "working people have already suffered enough. It is absurd to support lower real wages for working people as a tool for getting to lower unemployment. The real incomes of workers have been falling for years, while the ratio of CEO to worker pay in America is now in the hundreds, and massive amounts of the nation’s productive wealth are skimmed off the top of our economy by a bloated and wasteful financial sector in the American plutonomy. If there is another approach to full employment – one that does not place the burden of assisting unemployed workers on the backs of employed workers who are struggling themselves – we should take it."

       I do agree that people have suffered enough. Still the people who would suffer something of a nominal wage cut actually have been suffering far less. Indeed, the point about sticky wages is that during a downturn employers are much less likely to cut the wages of current employees than to stop hiring new ones. In a way this talk about "public sector" employees is a misnomer-Cowen actually spoke not of public sector but "service sector"  workers which is badly named if he really means public sector service sector. Really higher inflation would cut the wages of private sector workers just the same, many of them with very high wages.

    

      Keynes too, for that matter argued-against the classical economists-that it is not illogical that workers are much more likely to fight nominal cuts than real wage cuts. Kervick's real point is that we should to the MMT idea of a Job Guarantee (JG) an interesting idea that I basically agree with-I'd like to see a return of the old Public Works Administration (PWA).

     The MMT proponents of the JG though seem to worry about inflation more than is called for-we have very little history of inflation in this country anyway. The 70s were a misnomer-the only time in our history we've seen meaningful peacetime inflation.

     The JG is an interesting proposal that I would recommend further reading on. They actually have their own "fiscal" rule-the JG itself-as the parallel to Monetarism's monetary rule. However the JG is a rule only to the extent that the wage paid to workers employed under JG are paid a flat wage that is not indexed to inflation-to avoid the Minsky style wage-price spiral. In the proposals I've read about, the wage paid to workers hired under JG-the government is the Employer of Last Resort (ELR) is $8. This wage is of course not very high-though somewhat higher than the official minimum wage of $7.25. It would not rise with the rate of inflation but would rise based on the fiscal rule-maybe every 5 to 10 years.

     http://www.levyinstitute.org/pubs/wp_706.pdf

    Again there is maybe too much concern about inflation. And I still believe that inflation is in some way a positive phenomenon either as cause or effect. After all was not America's greatest populist William Jennings Bryan a great inflationist?  Ultimately what makes things hard is not the natural rising cost of goods but when we don't have the jobs with healthy wages to pay for it.


    There are not many times in history that deflationary periods-where the cost of goods is falling that would therefore be assumed to be a positive for working people have not been deeply troubled economic times. Sumner makes the point that one example is the 20s-which he says buttresses his point that what matters is whether inflation/deflation is demand or supply based, If it's demand based then deflation is bad and inflation is good.



      

11 comments:

  1. Did Scott just conflate "real incomes" with "real wages"?

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  2. Did he? How so Anon? Not even sure what the dstinction is

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  3. This is the perfect post to layout some comparables. It isn't really MMT vs. MM.

    1. At one end of spectrum are the Austrians. No printing. Money stores value. Obligation is to keep its value. Period. Anything else is besides the point.

    4. At other end of spectrum is MMT, money is a tool of state, in real terms no one owns ANYTHING, since everything has a price, and govt. can print any amount of money, and then tax it back.

    2. Standing very close to Austrians is MM, NGDP is a cap on growth, booms will be pissed on religiously, gvt driven booms will be nuked in the the crib, RGDP is preferable over inflation, and real productivity will be favored over fake RGDP like paying public employees more - and since we do all that IF, and ONLY if we ever enter a crisis, we'll print some money - and no human will be in control of this.

    1.5-3. Standing closer to the MM than to MMT is a big bulk of DeKrugman lot, they have non-market outcomes they are interested in, they want gvt. to backstop bad credit risks for social good, they want inequality to fall.

    The reason I see this group as so big, is that many inside this group differ on:

    1. is reducing income inequality important enough to do it even if it slows down growth.

    2. should govt. be making "investments" in the private sector, like it wants bad credit risk citizens?

    3. How much control of the Fed does the govt. really have?

    The key thing to me about this group is their tenuous grasp on how subsidies on bad risks raise prices on good risks (education, housing, ethanol).

    A man who is a bad credit risk on a mortgage, can overnight be a good risk as a renter.

    A woman who's on campus French degree is a bad credit risk on a student loan, is a good credit risk when she has to take online courses to specifically get a certain job.

    But there are many shades of gray inside this thinking, and most of the econ bloggers fall somewhere in there.

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  4. Well I'm with you on the opportunity for comparables. Not sure I follow you on all of it. If the Austrians are 1 and MMT is 4 then why are Krugman et al 1-5-3?

    Seems like for you the Austrians are 1, MM 2 Krugman and Delong 3, MMT 4.

    Your description of the Austrains sounds right but as to your descprtion of MM:

    " Standing very close to Austrians is MM, NGDP is a cap on growth, booms will be pissed on religiously, gvt driven booms will be nuked in the the crib, RGDP is preferable over inflation, and real productivity will be favored over fake RGDP like paying public employees more - and since we do all that IF, and ONLY if we ever enter a crisis, we'll print some money - and no human will be in control of this."


    I agree this might seem to be implicit in the idea of NGDP, Sumner never comes close to amditing this-but as you have suggested maybe because he's smart enough politically not to.

    But whenever we talk about the real estate bubble he-and other MMers like Lars Christensen seem to think that bubbles are someothing we need not worry about at all, they come close to denying there is any such thin as a bubble.

    As NGDP sounds-particulary with a lower target of only 2 like Lars it sounds like effectively there will be "zero tolerance" for inflation-sumner's more generous 5.5% might seem to leave consierably more room.

    The MMTers are not-or at least think they are not inflationists. Like you have your own plan I read about-no minimum wage, the poor working for $.50 an hour of hard labor at your house-they have their own idead of a Job Guarantee (JG) by the state where anyone who is able and wants to work but has no job would get one through the state-it might not be directly with the government, it might be with a non-profit or even a private employuer-but the state would set it up. They would all be paid a flat $8 wage.

    This would not be indexed to inflation so they believe it would not be infaltionary and could only be raised based on a "fiscal rule"-that's what makes me say they're like bizzaro MMers as M<onetarists love monetary rules these guys want fiscal rules-roughly about once every 5 to ten years.

    Of course if you did this tomorrow this would have the effect of immdeiatly pushing up the real minimum wage to $8 an hour and we would get a one time inflationary spike. Of course doing it this way would make the wages deflationary.

    So if Austrains and MMers want to piss on booms who exactly wants to light them up as these guys to don't want inflation or at least think they dont?

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  5. Morgan in addition, one way the Austrains are like MMT believe it or not is both deny money neutrality.

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  6. One more way that the Austrians are like MMT - they both don't like the way things are but neither are ready to actually do anything significant about it!

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  7. Becky! You've finnallly checked in here at Diary of a Republican Hater! Welcome aboard.

    I mean the Austrains and MMMT-or Scott-all do what they can to change things-they argue for what they think is wrong and should be done. What else is there?

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  8. Mike,
    I think Sumner is using wages and income in the same context. I'm not sure he's conflating the two. A poor choice of words perhaps, but I'd like to hear him say so. Here is what he said above: "Dan, The effect of inflation on real incomes completely depends on whether it’s demand or supply side inflation...." Where anonymous sees the conflation is in using the term real incomes as opposed to real wages. Wages are but a part of income, not the sum total.

    What I don't understand is when Sumner says this: "If it’s higher aggregate demand, then any rise in prices occurs precisely because AD shifted right, which means real incomes also rise (Unless SRAS is vertical.) Are you assuming SRAS is vertical?" We've been seeing rising prices in our domestic (US) economy without the increase you'd expect from aggregate demand, and real wages have not shown any real meaningful increase that the model would expect. In the new world global economy, along with speculative, computer driven commodity trading,key consumer prices are rising in a demand constrained economy.

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  9. Well the offical inflation rate is only about 2%. Sumner is saying that basically we want inflation that is demand based but not supply based-that is shortages.

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  10. forgive my point system, I didn't fix it, I simply mean that in practice MM is far closer to Austrians than people grasp / admit.

    And MMT is way the f*ck over there beyond the hill even far away from the DeKrugman clan.

    Sax, 30M unemployed will not cannot be given $8 per hour flat and allowed to appeal to a govt. agency to have the job etc.

    GVT. does not scale.

    Obama says, "turns out there weren't that many shovel ready jobs."

    Even harden progressives admit that FDR's WPP could NEVER get off the ground in today's regulatory environment.

    Look, Paypal and Ebay WORK, they scale at the snap of a finger.

    We need MUST HAVE the signalling, and you getting $5 or $6 per hour + 50% of the bid on your work week, means:

    1. super fast true market pricing. Within weeks families hiring full time babysitters are using basic search functions to find babysitters other families have kept hiring for 6 weeks - "hey a keeper!" and they swoop in and bid up, forcing the lucky ducky parents to ante back up...

    2. "Hey picking up dogshit for the 30 houses in Woodbridge, never gets less than a $4 "per hour." - that's $8, and I just have to do 30 houses - it really only takes me 3 hours a day, so I'm really making $21 an hour" I use this example, because:

    a. it is yucky
    b. it shows the way the way a fuzzy imperfect system lets everybody think their own on it and still win. neighbors are group buying - to them it is $3 a house to not pick up dog shit. To a guy who values his time, he's just cruising through 30 backyards, he's benefiting because you turn up your nose.

    3. Rich to middle class benefits with side payments start businesses. A rich family bids $5 a hour to have Gourmet meals they choose (and pay for supplies on) cooked by out of work chef, after a couple weeks of this is noted and upper middle class families are saying, "hey I'll cover food costs and float you another $50 on the side" 20 of these, and you have started a fledgling newco.

    Look, once you get over the mental hump of pretending there will be a nation full of $1 per hour workers (there's too much bidder greed for anyone trying hard) the only real issue is that YES this system will make it incredibly hard to freeload because telemarketing companies will force you to sit by your home phone and answer incoming calls and read a script for 40 hours a week, so you might as well go figure out how to be worth more than $1 per hour.

    Of course, you can dump prisoners into it, the elderly when we raise the retirement age, it is a solution that doesn't require a bureaucracy.... any real progressive should love it.

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  11. Morgan you said:

    "30M unemployed will not cannot be given $8 per hour flat and allowed to appeal to a govt. agency to have the job etc."

    Morgan you tell me what that would mean-give me the scenario that would unfold if tomorrow the government did try to do that plan of paying anyone off the street immeidately $8 for say-here in New York we have a need for it-picking up the dilipidated borken down schools, rennovating,, etc.

    I know you think it's unthinkable, the floor is yours. You say that can't happen. what if tomorrow it did? What world would that give us?

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