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	<title>William Poole, Author at Show-Me Institute</title>
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		<title>Milton and Money Stock Control</title>
		<link>https://showmeinstitute.org/article/taxes/milton-and-money-stock-control/</link>
		
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		<pubDate>Thu, 02 Aug 2007 16:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>  Read this article at theFederal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. View a brief video commemoratingMilton Friedman, hosted by thepresident of the Milton andRose D. Friedman Foundation. President, Federal Reserve [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://showmeinstitute.org/article/taxes/milton-and-money-stock-control/">Milton and Money Stock Control</a> appeared first on <a href="https://showmeinstitute.org">Show-Me Institute</a>.</p>
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<td align="center"><big>Read this article at the<br /><a href="http://www.stls.frb.org/news/speeches/2007/07_31_07.html">Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis</a>.</p>
<p>View a <a href="http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=1892493896084481226&amp;hl=en">brief video commemorating<br />Milton Friedman</a>, hosted by the<br />president of the Milton and<br />Rose D. Friedman Foundation.</big></td>
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<p>President, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis</p>
<p><strong>Milton Friedman Luncheon</strong></p>
<p>Co-sponsored  by the University of Missouri-Columbia Department of Economics, the  Economic and Policy Analysis Research Center, and the Show-Me Institute</p>
<p>Held at the University of Missouri-Columbia<br />Columbia, MO<br />July 31, 2007</p>
<p><em><strong>Author&#8217;s note:</strong> I appreciate comments provided by my colleagues at the Federal Reserve  Bank of St. Louis. I take full responsibility for errors. The views  expressed are mine and do not necessarily reflect official positions of  the Federal Reserve System.</em></p>
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<p>We  are here today on Milton Friedman’s birthday to remember him and his  enormous contributions. Those of us who studied under him are  extraordinarily fortunate. Most of us were able to maintain contact with  him for the years between our studies and his death.</p>
<p>If Milton  were here today there is nothing he would enjoy more than a lively  seminar on some aspect of economics. A lively seminar is what I intend  to offer. I’m pretty sure that what I’m going to say would have provoked  him and that I would have learned a lot from hearing him comment on my  analysis.</p>
<p>Of the monetary economics battles Milton fought in the  1960s and 1970s, his policy prescription for steady money growth at a  low rate is the only important issue where he failed to carry the  profession. Mainstream macroeconomics accepts his view that the long-run  Phillips curve is vertical, that we need to focus on real, rather than  nominal, interest rates, that low inflation is central to economic  stability and that fiscal policy has little to do with short-run  fluctuations in employment and output. But few economists still support  money growth targeting.</p>
<p>Although Milton’s money-growth policy  prescription did not win out, I believe that his analysis justifying  this prescription has had much more influence than many realize. I’ll  review his case for this recommendation and then discuss how this case  relates to current central bank practice.</p>
<p>Before proceeding, I  want to emphasize that the views I express here are mine and do not  necessarily reflect official positions of the Federal Reserve System. I  thank my colleagues at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis for their  comments, but I retain full responsibility for errors.</p>
<h1>The Case for Money Stock Control</h1>
<p>As  a card-carrying monetarist, I argued the steady money growth case  vigorously in years past, and it is still my conviction that a central  bank ignores money growth at its peril. Milton and his co-authors,  especially Anna Schwartz, provided ample evidence that variations in  money growth were highly correlated with the business cycle, and he  argued that steady money growth would reduce the amplitude and frequency  of recessions. He also argued that sustained inflation would be  impossible without sustained money growth in excess of the economy’s  long-run real rate of growth.</p>
<p>Milton favored steady money growth  because he did not believe that central bankers were wise enough to  improve on the outcomes that would flow from steady money growth. With  evidence from the Greenspan era, Milton changed his view a bit, but was  not convinced that Greenspan’s success in adjusting the stance of  monetary policy was likely to be replicated by future Fed chairmen.</p>
<p>The  case for controlling the money stock also rested on the dangers of  controlling interest rates. A policy interest rate held too low set in  motion a cumulative process of larger and larger inflationary  disequilibrium; with a pegged nominal rate of interest, rising inflation  and inflation expectations would lower the real rate of interest. That  was the opposite of what would be needed to quell inflationary fires.  The process was symmetrical; with ongoing deflation, a monetary policy  holding a nominal interest rate steady would promote deflation and a  rising real rate of interest. An adjustable interest-rate peg does not  change the analysis in any fundamental way; given that inflation  expectations may be changing, the issue remains whether interest-rate  adjustments are adequate to move the real rate of interest in the  appropriate direction. Steady money growth, on the other hand, was  inherently stabilizing as the real rate of interest would tend to rise  during an inflation and fall during a deflation.</p>
<p>Milton also  argued for steady money growth on political grounds. A commitment to  steady money growth would reflect a rule of law rather than of men. He  did not trust the legislature to run monetary policy in a nonpolitical  way, nor did he trust “unaccountable bureaucrats,” as he might put it,  appointed for long terms to conduct a discretionary monetary policy. His  view was shaped by the Fed’s poor performance in the early years of the  Great Depression and by the fact that at that time pressure from  Congress, when it was in session, did push the Fed a bit in the correct  direction.</p>
<p>This background is all familiar ground; I review it to introduce my comments on current central bank practice.</p>
<h1>Consequences of Controlling the Federal Funds Rate</h1>
<p>Everything  Milton argued about money stock control is true, but the effect of  inflation expectations on the practice of monetary policy itself was, I  believe, a missing element in the analysis. The economy functions  differently when inflation expectations are firmly anchored. If a  central bank allows expectations to become unanchored, then  interest-rate control becomes a dangerous and potentially destabilizing  policy. But should the practice of monetary policy depend on how well  inflation expectations are anchored? I do not recall Milton discussing  this question, perhaps because he believed that the best way to maintain  well-anchored expectations over time was for the central bank to commit  to steady and low money growth under all circumstances.</p>
<p>How  does a central bank anchor inflation expectations? One approach would be  for the central bank to commit to low and steady money growth come what  may. A problem with this approach is that it may not appear credible to  the markets when financial instability and/or recession occurs. If a  policy of steady money growth has exceptions, can the exceptions be  defined in such a way to retain anchored inflation expectations?</p>
<p>A  necessary and sufficient condition for anchoring is that the central  bank act vigorously to resist inflation or deflation whenever it becomes  evident and particularly when inflation expectations change, up or  down, in an unwelcome way. If the central bank is willing to push as  hard as it takes, regardless of short-run consequences to unemployment  and especially to the bond and stock markets, then market participants  will develop firm views on the likely rate of inflation in the future.  The Fed must convince market participants who bet against it that they  will regret their bets.</p>
<p>It is highly desirable that the central  bank behave in a rule-like way, both for the political objective of the  rule of law rather than the rule of men and because predictable policy  promotes more efficient decisions in the private sector. To the maximum  possible extent, we desire an equilibrium in which the markets behave as  the central bank expects and the central bank behaves as the markets  expect. Central bank behavior to anchor expectations of low and stable  inflation is the single most important aspect of policy predictability. I  believe that the Fed has come a long way in that direction though,  obviously, there are certainly opportunities for the Fed to refine its  policy rule. In this context, by “rule” I simply mean that the Fed’s  policy actions are systematic and highly predictable responses to new  information.</p>
<p>Steady money growth would also be highly  predictable, but I believe that the Fed’s actual adjustments of its  federal funds rate target have yielded superior outcomes since 1982 to  what we would have observed under steady money growth. I also believe  that advances in knowledge permit us to say with some confidence that  these gains are not just an accident of Alan Greenspan’s special skills  and intuition.</p>
<p>So, the Fed has pushed hard at certain times, and  kept its federal funds target unchanged at other times, with the result  that inflation expectations are now quite well anchored and policy  adjustments are not themselves disturbances to the market. With  inflation expectations anchored, changes in the nominal federal funds  rate reliably move the real federal funds rate in the same direction and  by roughly the same amount. Data from trading in indexed Treasury  bonds, and from surveys, allow the Fed to monitor changes in inflation  expectations continuously. Such monitoring helps tremendously to provide  assurance that the Fed is not falling behind in its policy adjustments.</p>
<p>I  noted that an attractive part of the case for steady money growth was  that market-driven changes in interest rates would be inherently  stabilizing. Interestingly, and I think surprisingly, we now see the  same process at work with longer-term bond yields. The Fed adjusts its  federal funds rate target in a discretionary, though highly predictable,  fashion, but significant changes in long rates do occur. Those of you  who follow the markets closely could point to many cases in recent years  in which long rates have helped to stabilize the economy while the Fed  remained on the sidelines, holding the federal funds rate target  unchanged.</p>
<p>We are witnessing this phenomenon currently. Putting  aside what is happening to the markets as I speak—something I obviously  could not incorporate in my written text—the decline in long Treasury  rates last week surely helped to stabilize markets relative to a  situation in which those interest rates were held fixed by monetary  policy. If the Fed had been pegging long rates, the flight to quality  last week would have required the Fed to take funds out of the market.  That would have been a destabilizing response to market fears concerning  housing and the subprime mortgage market. Nor would the Fed have been  in a good place if it had to make a decision as to just how far it  should adjust a pegged long interest rate. This is the kind of judgment  best left to the market.</p>
<p>What our analysis missed a generation  ago was that the typical model with only one interest rate could not  possibly allow for stabilizing market responses in long rates when the  central bank set the short rate. Of course, macro econometric models did  have both short and long rates, but the structure of the models did not  permit analysis of the sort I am discussing because the typical term  structure equation made the long rate a distributed lag on the short  rate. The model’s short rate, in turn, was determined by monetary  policymakers setting it directly or by the money market under a policy  determining money growth.</p>
<p>Once we allow expectations to uncouple  the current long rate from the current short rate, the situation  changes dramatically. The market can respond to incoming information in a  stabilizing way without the central bank having to respond. Long bond  rates can change, and change substantially, while the federal funds rate  target remains constant.</p>
<p>Eventually, of course, if changed  conditions persist, the central bank will have to adjust the policy rate  in the direction required by the new information. In the absence of  such eventual policy adjustment, the destabilizing effects of a constant  interest rate emphasized in the earlier literature will appear.</p>
<h1>The Bottom Line</h1>
<p>Consider  where this analysis leaves us. Assume inflation expectations are well  anchored. The central bank can hold its policy rate relatively steady  and rely on market adjustments in long rates to do much of the  stabilization work. When new information arrives, most of the time the  central bank can wait for market responses and the passage of time to  clarify what is happening. The current situation is a perfect  illustration. The Fed doesn’t know and market participants do not know  either, the full implications of last week’s stock market declines and  increases in risk spreads. Market reactions last week may be overdone,  or perhaps not. We just do not know. In a situation like the terrorist  attacks of 9/11, the Fed knew enough to believe that a quick policy  response would be helpful and unlikely to itself be destabilizing.</p>
<p>A  typical market upset, such as last week’s, is not at all like 9/11.  Most of these upsets stabilize on their own, but some do not. I’m not  saying that the Fed should ignore what happened last week—we need to  understand what is happening. However, it is important that the Fed not  permit uncertainty over policy to add to the existing uncertainty. The  market understands, I believe, that the Fed will act in due time, if and  when evidence accumulates that action would be appropriate. That is why  trading in the federal funds futures market reflects changed odds from  two weeks ago on a policy adjustment later this year.</p>
<p>If last  week’s events do not turn out to change the probable course of economic  growth and inflation, then the fed funds futures market will reverse  course and the expected policy easing will disappear. Or, if evidence  accumulates that the inflation picture remains benign but the outlook  for the economy next year appears likely to be significantly weaker than  the current best guess, then the market will deepen its conviction that  the Fed will be cutting its fed funds target.</p>
<p>The regularity of  Fed behavior I espouse is that the Fed should respond to market upsets  only when it has become clear that they threaten to undermine  achievement of fundamental objectives of price stability and high  employment, or when financial-market developments threaten market  processes themselves. The Fed should not try to substitute its judgments  for the market’s judgment on appropriate security prices. The right  question to ask is not whether Fed action in response to any current  market upset would be desirable but rather whether it is possible to  define a systematic response to market upsets in general that would be  helpful. The answer I give is that effects on the economy can rarely be  understood without passage of time and more information. Occasionally,  there is contemporaneous evidence of damage to market mechanisms that  might justify quick Fed action.</p>
<p>The key point is that, in these  situations, the market is making judgments on security prices,  stabilizing the economy without the Fed having to lead the way. This is  exactly the process envisioned a generation ago by the monetarist  advocates of steady money growth. This is what Milton taught us about  markets, and he was right.</p>
<p>When inflation expectations are  firmly anchored, an important reason for the Fed to let markets take the  lead is that overactive Fed responses to market developments set  precedents that tend to destabilize markets in the future. If the market  believes that the Fed is always primed to adjust policy, then market  participants will spend more time trying to second-guess the Fed than  trying to understand what is happening to business and household  behavior. As I emphasized earlier, a good market equilibrium requires  that the Fed behave as the market expects. When there are widely varying  interpretations in the market about what is happening, it is impossible  for the Fed to behave as the market expects because there is no unified  view in the market about what is happening. At any given time, it may  be impossible for the market to come to a unified view about what is  happening, simply because of incomplete knowledge and different  professional judgments by those best informed. Still, there need be  little or no uncertainly about Fed behavior the day before an FOMC  meeting. Fed actions at future meetings months ahead will remain  uncertain, to both the market and the FOMC itself, because the future  information set is uncertain.</p>
<p>In the meantime, the central  tendency of market views on what is happening will control the long bond  rate and security prices more generally. Differences in market views as  to what is happening will determine who is long and who is short in the  market. Eventually, as new information clarifies the situation, the  variance of views around the central tendency will fall and more normal  market conditions will reemerge.</p>
<p>As for the politics of monetary  policy, I believe there is extremely wide support for a totally  apolitical Fed. There is a consensus on the desirability of low  inflation and that the Fed should do what it can to stabilize the  unemployment rate at the lowest rate consistent with sustained  non-inflationary economic growth. The market and most political leaders  believe that the Fed is apolitical. The market trusts us, and we, in  turn, work hard to retain this trust. When I say “we” I really mean the  Fed as an institution. Fed officials, staff and Reserve bank directors  have a deep understanding of the importance of apolitical monetary  policy. This understanding goes far toward making Fed actions reflect a  rule of law rather than a rule of the individuals making the decisions.  The closest analogy, perhaps, is that we work as fiduciaries. I do not  deny that it would be desirable for the Federal Reserve Act to be  clearer about the objectives the Fed should pursue. Still, the Fed as an  institution has gone a long way to make its policy actions rule-like in  their regularity. If the institution is strong and incorruptible, as I  believe it is, then we probably have as much assurance in a democratic  society as we are likely to get.</p>
<p>Although Milton did not prevail  in his quest to have the Fed maintain a constant money-growth rate, he  did prevail in his insistence that policy be apolitical and rely to the  maximum possible extent on market judgments. He lost a battle but truly  did win the war.</p>
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<p>The post <a href="https://showmeinstitute.org/article/taxes/milton-and-money-stock-control/">Milton and Money Stock Control</a> appeared first on <a href="https://showmeinstitute.org">Show-Me Institute</a>.</p>
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