Given low interest rates and the still-weak U.S. economy, it will be tempting for the U.S. government to continue running deficits and issuing additional debt. At some point, however, investors will recognize this behavior for the Ponzi scheme it is.Continue reading here.
Monday, December 5, 2011
Eichengreen on U.S. Fiscal Policy
Barry writes:
15 Years Later
It was fifteen years ago today that Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan gave his famous "irrational exuberance" speech, which suggested that U.S. equities were overvalued.
Between then and now, on an annualized basis,
Between then and now, on an annualized basis,
- the return on the U.S. stock market has been 5.55 percent.
- the return on the U.S. bond market has been 5.98 percent.
Sunday, December 4, 2011
Sargent and Sims
There is a nice profile of the new Nobelists in today's NY Times. Here is an excerpt for my army of ec 10 teaching fellows (and for teachers of introductory economics everywhere):
Economics, rather than politics, became his life’s work partly because of an inspiring teaching assistant named Jerry Kenley. Fifty years later, sitting in his office at N.Y.U., Mr. Sargent remembers his old T.A.
“Jerry liked to say, ‘Economics is organized common sense.’ I still think that’s about right,” Mr. Sargent says. Those early classes touched on everything from farm subsidies to taxation. “Wow, it really got me going,” he says.
Saturday, December 3, 2011
Friday, December 2, 2011
Is my ideology that obvious?
A perspective on the Ec 10 walkout from Connel Fullenkamp, a former student who now teaches at Duke:
I really don’t think that Professor Mankiw was trying to brainwash his students with any conservative ideology or agenda. I make this statement based on my own experiences.... I was a teaching assistant for Mankiw’s first-year Ph.D. course in macroeconomics for two years, which means that I sat in on his entire course twice.
If there’s any strong ideological undercurrent in Mankiw’s teaching, I would say that it’s Nerdism: the belief that people should listen to, and learn from, nerds. Because believe me—and I say this with genuine respect and affection—Mankiw is a nerd’s nerd.
The Draghi Deal
If I understand the news coming out of Europe correctly, the new head of the European Central Bank is offering a simple deal: If fiscal policy becomes hawkish, monetary policy will be dovish. In other words, as government spending is cut to put European governments on a sounder financial footing, monetary policy will do its best to ensure that any adverse impact on aggregate demand is kept to a minimum.
That seems a sensible compromise, given all the competing risks. Indeed a similar deal might well make sense for the United States.
My more liberal friends argue, based on Keynesian principles, that we need dovish fiscal policy as well. They often argue for short-run fiscal expansion coupled with long-run fiscal contraction. The problem is that fiscal policymakers cannot bind their future selves. It is hard to make commitments to future fiscal contraction credible, especially as short-run actions expand the budget deficit.
My more conservative friends argue, based on monetarist principles, that a dovish monetary policy risks future inflation. In my view, however, there are bigger risks than inflation just now. They include prolonged high unemployment and meager growth.
So I see Draghi as a fiscal hawk and monetary dove (at least under present circumstances). I wonder, which U.S. central bankers are in the same camp?
That seems a sensible compromise, given all the competing risks. Indeed a similar deal might well make sense for the United States.
My more liberal friends argue, based on Keynesian principles, that we need dovish fiscal policy as well. They often argue for short-run fiscal expansion coupled with long-run fiscal contraction. The problem is that fiscal policymakers cannot bind their future selves. It is hard to make commitments to future fiscal contraction credible, especially as short-run actions expand the budget deficit.
My more conservative friends argue, based on monetarist principles, that a dovish monetary policy risks future inflation. In my view, however, there are bigger risks than inflation just now. They include prolonged high unemployment and meager growth.
So I see Draghi as a fiscal hawk and monetary dove (at least under present circumstances). I wonder, which U.S. central bankers are in the same camp?
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