Ben Bernanke’s Secret Message to Congress: More Stimulus, Please
The Fed says it will tolerate more inflation, but won’t create it. Congress should.
(Reuters)
In normal times, when interest rates are higher than zero, fiscal stimulus doesn’t make much sense. Congress can cut taxes or increase spending to try to boost the economy, but the Federal Reserve will probably stand in its way. Why? Because the Fed has its inflation target, and the Fed cares very much about hitting it. If stimulus spending or tax cuts push inflation above the Fed’s target, the Fed will raise rates, slow the economy back down, and turn the whole exercise into a wash. If fiscal stimulus only keeps inflation from falling too far below the Fed’s target, the Fed won’t bother to lower rates like it otherwise would have. In either case, the economy is no better off with fiscal stimulus than it would have been without. Or, as economists put it, the multiplier is zero — for every dollar of stimulus spending, the economy is zero dollars larger.
Everything changes when rates fall to zero, even if it they shouldn’t. Suppose a big shock hits the economy — a shock so big that even zero interest rates can’t turn things around. In other words, suppose it’s 2008 all over again. In this case, fiscal stimulus won’t just crowd out monetary stimulus, because the Fed can’t cut rates anymore — it can’t cut below zero. Fiscal stimulus will make the economy better off, and perhaps substantially so.
It might not look like it, but forecasting sub-2 percent inflation nowadays is the Fed’s way of begging Congress to borrow more. That’s the big implication of the Fed’s big policy moves the past few months. The Fed is already buying $ 85 billion of bonds a month on an open-ended basis and has promised not to raise rates before unemployment falls below 6.5 percent or inflation rises above 2.5 percent. But it still thinks inflation will remain subdued, despite its bond-buying. In other words, the Fed is telling us it will tolerate a bit more inflation, but it won’t create it. That’s as good an invitation as Congress is going to get to cut taxes or increase spending, at least until inflation is around 2.5 percent. Now, the Fed might buy fewer bonds than it otherwise would if Congress does more, but we know it won’t raise rates — there’s little guessing how much fiscal stimulus the Fed will allow. The multiplier is big now.
Business : The Atlantic