cherdano, on 2011-June-11, 08:29, said:
I think we agree pretty much. However, unless I misunderstood s.th. very basic, what you describe as "printing money" would be described as the following two things in the US:
1. The federal government runs a deficit.
2. The federal reserve does "quantitative easing", i.e. basically printing money and using it to buy government debt.
I am just pointing this out since what you suggest (printing money to keep the inflation at 3%) seems to be the considered an irresponsible lunatic leftist position in the current public debate in the US.
There are two distinct phases to this. A government can run a deficit, which converts idle private savings into current investments. This is because in order to run a deficit there must be someone who is prepared to buy your bonds. If the economy was booming people would have many profitable investment opportunities and there would not be as great a demand for bonds. You could probably get around this via higher interest rates, but then you would in a sense be robbing peter to pay Paul, as you would necessarily be dampening investment somewhere. (One can see this in the Japenese economy, where the public's desire to buy "safe" Japanese bonds keeps their bond yields low despite a decade of ballooning public debt). At a time like this, with private companies unsure whether to invest there is probably a gain to running a moderate-large deficit. Thus, a deficit is essentially funded by lowering private investment.
Anyway, I got sidetracked, my point is that a deficit does not inherently affect the money supply at all. QE may or may not be funded by government debt, or may be funded by creating money. In the former case it is not inflationary, in the latter is is inflationary, but has some interesting caveats. Say the asset purchased is a mortgage, then as it gets paid off the bank accumulates money, which is is a slow deflationary pressure, as it is slowly decreasing the supply of "narrow money" as people are paying cash to the fed. Its not at all clear what the Fed plans to do with this money. Originally QE was seen as short term solution with the fed planing to sell the assets back to the market at some point. Its now looking like it might have to hold on to the m for a while. It could use the savings to purchase more assets, but normally the activities of a central bank are constrained in this regards. Moreover, if it sells them at a profit the entire escapade will be deflationary as it will be taking back more money than it originally injected. If it sells them at a loss the tax payer will take a hit.
Of course, by printing money it is taking this money from savers, on the grounds that good have value, and that value is only denominated in dollars, so changing the value of a dollar has an inherent effect on the value of goods. Saved dollars do not have inherent value so get degraded by inflation. The total value of this devaluation of savings is the value of the newly printed dollars in the Feds account.
It seems like one of the major problems in the US economy is a failure to invest. One could attempt to see to this shortfall via ever larger deficits to transfer money from private investors into public investments, but it seems like not only is this not really working, but it is also storing up trouble for the future, in the sense that as the debt gets paid back it will put pressure on companies to invest during the boom, which will lead to a real danger of overheating in the economy. Alternatively, by raising inflation one can attempt to force private companies to invest on their own, as holding on to capital becomes ever more expensive.
Inflation will also reduce the indebtedness of private consumers, which might to a little to alleviate suppressed consumer spending.
The physics is theoretical, but the fun is real. - Sheldon Cooper