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Showing posts with label Economic Squabbling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Economic Squabbling. Show all posts

Monday, February 13, 2023

One Weird Trick That Neoclassical Economists Hate!


Blair Fix caused a bit of a stir last week on economics Twitter with a cleaned up version of the above chart taken from his article on interest rates and inflation. My chart is a scatter plot of the U.S. annual CPI inflation rate versus the effective funds rate, from 1954-2022. The blue line is the best linear fit of the two variables. The “linear model” suggests that inflation is an increasing function of the nominal interest rate.

Blair was met with a predictable howl of indignation on Twitter. Why predictable? The belief that higher interest rates reduce inflation (with a technical twist I note below) is pretty much enshrined as an assumption in neoclassical economics. (I use “neoclassical” as a fancy-pants word to describe “mainstream academic economics,” as “mainstream” is somewhat ambiguous if we are not referring to academia.)

Although the firestorm of indignation the article created was fun and if I had any commercial sense I would pile into it (and I did in the past). However, I have gotten more boring as I have aged. The real answer is that “things are complicated.”

Initial Complication: Real Rates

The first source of well-deserved indignation is that the above chart is a misleading representation of neoclassical theory. The driving variable in neoclassical models are real interest rates, where the “real” interest rate is the nominal interest rate minus inflation. To add to the complexity, the inflation rate is supposed to be the expected inflation rate, not the historical rate of inflation.

It is entirely correct to describe neoclassical economics as assuming that the real interest rate drives inflation. These models have at their core dynamics that are driven by households optimising their expected consumption over time, where they are trading off current consumption versus future consumption. By definition, the expected increase in nominal goods prices is expected inflation, and the pay-off for not consuming now is that households can buy “bonds” that pay the nominal interest rate. Quick math tells us that the trade-off between spot and future consumption is linked by the real interest rate. These dynamics are assumed to be true in a neoclassical model — since the presence of those dynamics is the defining characteristic of “neoclassical” models. (A mainstream academic could invent a model not of this structure, but it would not qualify as a “neoclassical model” as I define the term. This is the sort of problem that labels like “mainstream” contend with.) On paper, the model could have wacky dynamics that a real rate increase could cause higher inflation (that model would probably never be taken seriously, as it is the “wrong” answer), but the key point is that real rates are an assumed driver of economic dynamics.

From a scientific point of view, if you assume something is true and build your methodology around that assumption, your assumption is not falsifiable. (See Kalman filter discussion below if you object to that assertion.)

I generated the chart above by subtracting the annual CPI inflation rate from the (overnight) Fed Funds rate. That is, it is comparing measured inflation data on a backwards-looking basis over the past year versus the nominal return looking one day forward. Given the low quality and short time availability of expected inflation rates, I will not attempt to create a long history of real rates. For the purposes of my article, I will largely use “real rates” and “nominal rates” somewhat interchangeably, on the argument that the central bank hiking rates will tend to raise both the nominal and real policy rate, and what we are interested in in is the effect of policy rate changes on inflation.

What Do We Need To Do?

The problem with the “effect of interest rates on inflation” debate is that it is so poorly framed. Inflation is normally thought of as an “outcome” of the trends in the real economy. If interest rates have any effect on the economy, they presumably have some effect on inflation. The real question is: is there a predictable effect on inflation that allows central banks to micro-manage the inflation rate (which is what inflation targetters and their theoretical offspring insist is possible)?

In other words, we need to test particular models of the relationship between interest rates and inflation, and see whether they allow for micromanagement of the economy. Given that there is an infinite number of models that could allow for such micromanagement, it is going to be extremely hard to reject all of them. We would effectively need to find and validate a model that shows such micromanagement is impossible. That is a difficult task, with the difficulty increased by the reality that not a lot of people are looking for such models.

The Empirical Problem

I have repeatedly noted the following, but will repeat for new readers. The following observations appears to cover a lot of the observed data — call them “stylised facts.”

  1. Inflation tends to rise during expansions, and will spike in response to shortages. (E.g., periodic oil price spikes, the post-pandemic price hikes.)

  2. Recessions generally result in lower inflation, for the straightforward reason that a collapse in production and employment will reduce the intensity of shortages. Once the shortages are cleared out, deflationary tendencies reverse.

  3. A rapid increase in nominal rates will cause stress on private sector balance sheets, and can trigger a crisis that results in a recession.

This allows monetary policy to have limited control over inflation — central banks can trigger recessions, reducing high inflation rates. This certainly does not qualify as “micromanagement of inflation rates” as claimed by neoclassical boosters of inflation-targeting central banks.

Meanwhile, empirical testing is confounded by the known ideological biases of central banks. Central bankers believe that raising real interest rates cools inflation, and cut rates rapidly in response to recessions. As such, they will increase real rates during an expansion in response to the inflation rise in point #1 above. Survivorship bias implies that real rates will peak before recessions — and plunge once the central bank is aware of the recession.

About that “Overwhelming” Empirical Literature

Neoclassicals continuously claim that they have an “overwhelming” empirical literature that demonstrates that interest rates work the way they do.

A lot of the tests are model-agnostic (I discuss the model-based ones next). Unfortunately, if we accept the stylised facts as true, they can explain almost all of the test not tied to particular models in the literature that I have seen. I cannot claim to have read every single article published in the literature, but 100% of the ones I have read were terrible. Neoclassical economists get mad when I write things like this, but if I have a 0% success rate reading a literature, I see little point in keeping reading.

As an aside, the worst part of the literature was the idea that we can read internal policy deliberations of policymakers to “prove” that interest rates work the way that neoclassicals insist. Even a slight knowledge of intellectual history tells us that closed groups believe that their shared beliefs are true, and will use those beliefs to explain events around them. By that standard, we could have elite universities handing out doctorates in haruspicy (“100,000 Romans cannot be wrong!”).

Model Based — Why Hello r*!

If we move away from model-agnostic test methods, we end up with the “neutral” interest rate — now rebranded r* — literature. Since all the standard neoclassical models predict that something like r* exists, we should see it in the observed data.

The problem is that we can reject r* being a constant, or a known simple function of other observed economic variables. So, neoclassicals assume that r* is time-varying, and estimate r* based on procedures like the Kalman Filter.

Once we strip the mathematical goobledy-gook away from the procedure, the Kalman Filter works as follows.

  1. Assume the dynamic model is true.
  2. Use the observed data (real interest rates, inflation, GDP growth, whatever) into a statistical procedure to estimate the “internal variables” of the model — r*, y* (“potential GDP”), etc. — so that observed data is in line with the estimated model.
  3. Update the “star variables” as data comes in.

However, the issue here is that if inflation and real interest rates are autocorrelated variables (move slowly over time), we can force r* to move rapidly enough to get the model to fit the recent history. As long as the autocorrelation continues, the model will have roughly correct predictions.

And this is exactly what we saw in practice. The estimate for r* in the United States plunged after 2008 once the negative real interest rates did not result in the predicted acceleration in growth/inflation. (Yay! Secular stagnation!) The models roughly matched the sclerotic pace of economic variables during the 2010s. And one the 2020 pandemic disruptions hit, people stopped estimating the variables since the models blew up. (In technical applied mathematics terms, “lol, lmao.”)

In other words, it is very hard to falsify a model using a statistical procedure that assumes that the model is true.

Concluding Remarks

The correct answer to the “inflation-interest rate debate” is that most the “answers” being pushed are incorrect. Like other areas of heterodox-neoclassical controversy, my prediction is that pretty much the exact same points will be raised a decade from now.


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(c) Brian Romanchuk 2023

Tuesday, October 11, 2022

Nobel* Prize Chatter

The Nobel* Prize for economics announced Monday resulted in the usual mainstream/heterodox mud slinging, reviving arguments about banking. The arguments that I saw confirmed my prior views that economist banking debates are largely pointless; the mainstream and post-Keynesian sides largely recite talking points past each other. Although I have obvious sympathies to the post-Keynesian side, the means of expressing the critiques have drifted into a stylised form that does not help anybody at this point.

Monday, February 28, 2022

Comments On "MMT And Policy Assignment..."

Arslan Razmi has released a working paper “MMT and Policy Assignment in an Open Economy Context: Simplicity is Useful, Oversimplifcation Not So Much.” It is a 27 page paper running through stability analysis of post-Keynesian models that allegedly tell us something about Modern Monetary Theory (MMT). In addition to having a condescending tone (as seen in the title of the paper), the analysis within the paper is not particularly impressive. In my view, Razmi has set up a straw man argument and then thrashes it vigorously. I have seen similar post-Keynesian articles in the past, so I did not spend much time digging into the details.

Monday, October 25, 2021

Reading The Classics: Mathematics Vs. Economics

There’s been a fun (but silly) long-running debate on Twitter whether economists need to read canonical texts: Smith, Marx, Ricardo, Keynes, etc. What caught my eye is that a mainstream economist compared economics to mathematics — why don’t we learn calculus by studying the history of calculus? Why this is interesting is that is showed a lack of understanding of the situation in both mathematics and economics.

Please note that this article is a discussion of the philosophy of teaching at the university level, so do not expect any conclusions that will help make analysing bond markets easier. That said, there is an outline of a critique of the core methodological principles of neoclassical macro.

Monday, March 29, 2021

Econwars Blogging Is Back, Or What?

I have seen a few articles discussing the rise of the new economics debates, MMT, and blogging versus Twitter econ. I just want to make a few scattered observations.

The underlying story is the debate about inflation risks that relate to Biden's fiscal package. My bias is to expect inflation to be low and stable, but there are a lot of disruptions hitting global supply chains (the blockage of the Suez being the latest).  I do not have enough conviction to take a strong stance. Meanwhile, the inflation nutters will seize on practically any rise in inflation or bond yields as a signal to take victory. As such, I am dodging that fundamental debate.

Monday, February 1, 2021

Capital Complexities

The definition and treatment of capital is an important issue that arises quickly when discussing neoclassical approaches to the business cycle. In particular, one can rapidly fall down the rabbit hole of the Cambridge Capital Controversies. However, if the objective is to focus on what is important for understanding the business cycle, we see that capital is hard to easily model, and this is related to the opacity of business cycle analysis.

Sunday, September 20, 2020

The Fiscal Folk Theorem

In between editing my MMT primer, I read a burst of articles (20+) discussing government debt management in the current situation from non-MMT sources (have to see what the other side thinks). Mainly market commentary, but also op-eds from ivy league professors or other highly credentialed people, think tanks, maybe a rating agency, etc. -- but no journal articles (if one is sensitive to that sort of thing). As one would expect, the articles covered a wide range of political views and economic theory affiliations. What I realised (after the fact) was that the operational content of every single one of those articles collapsed to what I call the Fiscal Folk Theorem. It might surprise people to read this, but the folk theorem is correct. The issue is that the predictive content of the theorem is limited, and if mis-applied, it leads to The Widowmaker Fallacy.

Neoclassical economists are not going to be happy with my message. For them, the most palatable possibility is that this is purely a communications problem. Even if this is true, it is a catastrophic communications problem - this sample may have been relatively small, but I have digested so much financial market commentary to know that this is a widespread condition. Very simply, any neoclassical theory that goes beyond the Fiscal Folk Theorem is not making a dent in the wider conversation.

Sunday, September 6, 2020

The Implausibility Of The Lower Bound Escape Clause

Simon Wren-Lewis discussed a recent debate about the fiscal policy of the U.K. Labour Party, in "Will taxes have to rise?" I am not interested in the internal debates of the U.K. Labour Party, so I am largely agnostic about the underlying issues being debated. I just want to react to some statements about the use of fiscal rules and the MMT/neoclassical squabbling. I think the neoclassical position is on thin ice -- and the fiscal rules championed by Wren-Lewis are questionable -- and relying on the "lower bound" to avoid obvious problems with fiscal rules does not really work.

Sunday, December 1, 2019

So, Does Interest Rate Policy Work?

Chart: U.S. Fed Funds, 2-/10-year Slope
I am looking for new topics to write about, and I think I am returning to a topic of perennial interest: mainstream versus post-Keynesian debates. My thinking is that the main practical point of differentiation at present is the debate about the effectiveness of interest rate policy. The problem is that debate is exceedingly difficult to analyse in practice.

Thursday, June 6, 2019

Fixing Out-Of-Control Banking Systems?

This is just a short post-script to some points in the James Meadway article I discussed yesterday. What is to be done about financial sectors that are out-of-control, and endangering economic stability?

Wednesday, June 5, 2019

Comments on Meadway's Criticisms of MMT


James Meadway recently published "Against MMT" (Modern Monetary Theory), in which he lays out a number of criticisms of the theory. Although it might have helped my readership numbers, I really did not want to get drawn into the mudslinging around MMT that erupted this January. One of the public relations problems MMT faces is that it seems that MMTists are in continued arguments with seemingly everyone. The negative tone of these arguments distract from the constructive aspects of the theory.

This latest Meadway article illustrates the problem. Although some of my contacts on Twitter believe that this article has interesting points to address, I do not find them particularly novel, nor where they given a fashion that is designed to get a polite response from MMTists.

Sunday, March 17, 2019

Understanding DSGE Macro Models

Dynamic Stochastic General Equilibrium (DSGE) articles have attracted a great deal of attention in economic squabbling. In my view, the existing discussions of DSGE models -- mine included -- have been confusing and/or misleading. Properly understood, DSGE macro models are an attempt by neoclassical economists to weld together two standard optimisation problems, but with the defect that the neoclassicals lacked the notation to state the resulting problem clearly. This lack of clarity has made the debates about them unintelligible. Once we clean up notation, these models have a variety of obvious limitations, and it is unclear whether they have any advantages over stock-flow consistent models.

Update 2017-03-18 I finally tracked down an article that is useful for my purposes (one day after publishing this, of course). This working paper from Bank of England researchers acts an exception to some of my comments on the state of the literature. At present, I do not think I need to retract many comments (although a speculative one was heavily qualified), as I noted multiple times that I was basing my comments on the literature I examined. That said, the article conforms to my description of the "reaction function interpretation" (explained within the text). There is a technical update added below with further details.

Wednesday, March 13, 2019

What Did We Learn From The MMT Maelstrom?

My guess is that every prominent economist that wants to mouth off about Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) has already said their piece, and the arguments that swamped my Twitter feed may finally go back to their earlier levels. It is abundantly clear that the prominent New Keynesians who attacked MMT want it to disappear, but that seems unlikely (although I am obviously biased in that assessment). From the perspective of the history of economic theory, the neoclassical reaction was following past form, and we can expect the same patterns in the future.

Thursday, February 14, 2019

Functional Finance Versus New Keynesian Economics, Krugman Edition

Paul Krugman has piled onto the "MMT explained by non-MMTers" bandwagon, with a critique of Functional Finance. Functional Finance is largely associated with the Old Keynesian Abba Lerner, and is one of the key intellectual roots of Modern Monetary Theory (MMT). In my view, the most interesting part of the article is that it contradicts the commonly made assertion that there is very little new in MMT (which Krugman hints at in the article as well). In presenting his summary of Functional Finance, Krugman obviously has theoretical blinders on, and the objective of MMTers is to point out the existence of those blinders.

There is a legitimate substantive debate about issues underneath the disagreement, I am not going to assert which side is correct. However,I would note that only the MMT side actually sounds like it made the effort to understand the ideas on both sides of the debate. As a result, there is no doubt that MMT represents an advancement of knowledge relative to the neoclassical consensus.

Saturday, February 2, 2019

Why Are MMT Critiques Generally Terrible?

The deluge of bad Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) critiques continues. Although it is possible that there are some diamonds in the rough, all the articles I read were downright stinkers. They were so bad that I refuse to dignify their existence by even citing them. However, as someone in the MMT camp, I just want to give a few pointers for my readers as to why those critiques stink.

There certainly are legitimate critiques of MMT, but they are hard to find. Even academics end up citing poor critiques written by non-MMTers; nobody can be apparently bothered to read the MMT academic literature. Which is a rather troubling commentary on the diseased state of modern academia (speaking as a hardline old school ex-academic). In this article, I just cover the ludicrous arguments; I will let the reader try to find some reasonable ones elsewhere. I am in the middle of developing an investment accelerator model within my Python SFC model framework, and I do not want to waste my time beating up on clowns.

Sunday, January 20, 2019

MMT In The Newsflow Again

Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) has been in the news again (and filled up my Twitter feed...). There have been a number of attempts to "explain" MMT by various American conservatives. As one might expect, those attempts have been pathetic; it is generally a good idea to have at least a reasonable grasp of a topic before attempting to explain it. Critics of MMT generally do not bother with that step. Since I am trying to work on other projects, I will only give a quick response to what I have seen, in case some of my readers are not familiar with MMT. (My working assumption is that most of my readers are, hence the brevity of this article.)

Wednesday, November 28, 2018

Representative Agent Macro And Recessions

J.W. Mason kicked off the latest skirmish in the never-ending macro wars with his Jacobin article "A Demystifying Decade for Economics." (Note: at the time of writing, the article was taken down until its publication in Jacobin.) This prompted a Twitter debate about representative agent macro, which eventually led to this Beatrice Cherrier article on heterogeneous agent models. In my view, the debate about representative agent models is a red herring. Mainstream macroeconomists main skill is in framing debates in a fashion that is congenial to the mainstream; however, the preferred framing leads to dead ends. My current research focus is on recessions, and although I have not gone too far in refreshing my survey of mainstream macro, the value of mainstream macro theory in this debate is limited.

Saturday, November 3, 2018

The Myth Of The Myth Of Monetary Sovereignty

Frances Coppola recently wrote “The myth of monetary sovereignty,” that rehashes some old complaints about Modern Monetary Theory (MMT), which could be summarised as saying that MMT is only applicable for the United States. There are perhaps some claims within the article regarding developing economies that are worth debating, but they are not of interest to myself. My background and writing interests are in the analysis of the developed economies, and I largely stick to my knitting.

(As an update on "Inflation Breakeven Analysis": the book should be ready for ebook publication by next week, unless something else goes wrong with formatting.)

Tuesday, April 10, 2018

MMT Versus "Structural Keynesianism"?

Professor Thomas Palley has once again launched a critique of Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) in "Modern Money Theory (MMT) vs. Structural Keynesianism." One could argue that there are some useful nuggets in his argument, but they are arguably behind the times. His critique is of how he perceives MMT -- which has only a limited relationship to MMT as it exists now.

I probably should have ignored his article, but too many people have discussed it, and so I do not want to leave the impression that his arguments actually represent weak points of MMT.

Sunday, March 18, 2018

Understanding Fiscal Sustainability Debates

I have encountered a number of discussions of fiscal sustainability over the past weeks. In particular, there have been debates between proponents of Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) and mainstream economists. This article does not attempt to settle the debate (although I am in the MMT camp, and obviously biased), rather frame the discussion. One of the problems with the debate is that the sides tend to talk past each other, as they have a quite different theoretical views, and this article explains why.