Thursday, December 18, 2008

"So when does Fed policy truly become inflationary? "

Here's someone who would consider me crazy. Tim Duy on the Economists's View:

"Fed policy has been directed at improving credit market functioning, thereby acquiring assets, of which the expansion of liabilities is simply a side affect of the policy, not the policy itself. The Fed apparently views deliberate expansion of liabilities – a commitment of x% percent growth in some monetary aggregate via Treasury purchases – as quantitative easing. A commitment to increase the balance sheet at a steady pace (the first derivative) rather than maintain a high level. We are not there yet.

Is this distinction important? Or just semantics? I believe it is important, as the latter, a move to target the liabilities side of the balance sheet, would imply that the Fed is deliberately trying to stoke an inflationary fire. This may become the future policy, but for now the Fed is simply trying to keep the financial system from collapsing ( OKAY ). Inflation would be an accident, not a deliberate policy effort, at least from the Fed’s point of view ( OKAY ). For the moment, the policy remains insufficient to ward off deflationary pressures long as the rest of the world refuses to accept the burden of global adjustment.( HOW SO? )

The problem, in my mind, is that the rest of the world either refuses or is simply incapable of shouldering some of the burden of global adjustment. This inability to adjust appears to be the end result of almost thirty years of global acceptance and US indifference to external imbalances. Global consumption and production patterns, both spacially and intertemporally, are so misaligned that it looks like we are all now in a race to the bottom together. An amazing global policy failure. So, so depressing. ( WHAT'S THE RACE? )

So when does Fed policy truly become inflationary? Currently, I am thinking it becomes inflationary when policymakers become desperate enough to attempt to use monetary policy to entirely offset the headwinds blowing against economic activity ( WHY? ). When they truly attempt to target asset prices to “fix” the housing market( THIS ISN'T WISE ). When they decide the easiest answer to the excessive build up of debt is to inflate it away( IT'S FINE WITH ME ). At that point, policy will shift from the asset side of the balance sheet to the liability side. That is when Treasury and the Fed will risk ( HOW SO? ) a disorderly adjustment of the Dollar. Hopefully we will not get there. But I suspect that is when the tide will turn for the Fed."

Is it hyperinflation? Where is the dollar going? And why?

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Sir, have a look at this libertarian blog.

Donald Pretari said...

Thanks,

I've added it to my blog list.

Take care,

Dom