Monday, December 15, 2008

"The risk that this is not the relevant analogy for the US, and that policymakers are not prepared to accept such a possibility."

After saying that mining the Great Depression for clues on how to get us out of this current problem is of minimal use, I find this post by Tim Duy on the Economist's View interesting:

"But to be a real Dollar rout, we would expect to see Treasuries come under severe pressure, which has not exactly been a recent trend. So perhaps there really is nothing to fear. Indeed, I have argued that that if the stimulus is too excessive, that excess should reveal itself in the Treasury market, and policymakers can simply back off. No problem – ease away. Build those bridges.

This assumes that policymakers back off. What if rising Treasury rates encourage the Fed to double down, expanding quantitative easing to hold rates low and stimulative. What if years of research on the Great Depression have left even the best and the brightest with tunnel vision such that they could not accept that they were wrong?

Bottom Line: The Fed is headed to the zero mark, with another 50bp almost certain this week. It is widely expected that they will give some guidance as to their next steps, pointing us in the direction of an explicit policy of quantitative easing. Fed policy, as well as fiscal policy, assumes that the Great Depression is the most accurate analogy. This assumption ignores the external position of the US, which stubbornly refuses to adjust. If that failure to adjust is relevant, then recent Dollar stability was simply a head-fake. We should see pressure on the Dollar and, ultimately, Treasuries. Policymakers could adjust, but would they? With pursuit of the Great Depression case as the baseline scenario, it seems prudent to keep in mind the risk that this is not the relevant analogy for the US, and that policymakers are not prepared to accept such a possibility."

I think that Printing Money is simply the clearest option that we have. It has little to do with the Great Depression. The problems this could lead to are serious, and we'll be in for a rough ride. But the fact that the policy of Printing Money is Assessable makes it a good choice. I doubt that anyone in this mess is going to hold to a failing policy for too long. Rather, I would fear that we do not give these policies a chance to be assessed.

As to the point about the usefulness of the Analogy with the Great Depression, I agree.

No comments: