Should we replace Mervyn King with a robot?

By Seán Keyes Jan 13, 2012

Sean Keyes

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What if the recession wasn't real? What if the UK economy could return to its former growth path quickly and almost without any cost? And what if all that was needed to start this process was a short statement from Bank of England governor Mervyn King?

A growing number of economists believe just that. They are called 'market monetarists'. And, led by Bentley University's Scott Sumner (read his great blog, TheMoneyIllusion), their ideas are suddenly being endorsed by some of the biggest names in economics and banking.

What they imagine is a world without central bankers. A world where monetary policy is managed by machines. Where Keynesian stimulus spending and wrenching business cycles are a thing of the past.

It's all got to do with something called NGDP.

Forget interest rates

Currently the Bank of England steers the economy by adjusting interest rates to hit a target inflation rate of 2% (as measured by the consumer price index). This worked well enough during the 'great moderation', a golden, self-congratulatory 25 year period for macroeconomists and central bankers when inflation (by mainstream measures at least) was low and recessions were mild.

But since 2008 their interest rate lever has stopped working. 0% rates have not been sufficient to spur spending and growth. So what's the solution?

Market monetarists say that central banks should instead target a given rate of nominal gross domestic product (NGDP) growth instead of a given rate of inflation. NGDP is simply the sum of all spending in the economy in a year – it's what you'd get if you didn't bother to adjust GDP for inflation. A central bank might pick a target of, say, 5% NGDP growth, consisting of 2.5% desired inflation plus the 2.5% long-run trend growth in output. But how would it work in practice?

The economy depends on Mervyn King's credibility

Well, say the market monetarists, imagine two possible states: an optimistic state where the people expect good times, prosperity and growth; and an otherwise identical but pessimistic state where the people are uncertain and fearful about their economic future. The citizens in the optimistic state will invest, borrow and spend freely which will lead to prosperity; uncertainty and fear in the pessimistic state will lead to self-fulfilling stagnation.

However, the poorer world could become the richer one, with a collective change of mindset. Here is where our market monetarist central bank comes in. Its role is as the great persuader. It creates those expectations of prosperity.    

To change minds, the market monetarist central bank must be credible. Let's say that the Bank of England is not perfectly credible, in that its board of governors is divided between policy hawks (those who want to tighten monetary policy) and doves (those who want to loosen it). People might reasonably doubt its commitment to reflating the economy. How would the Bank of England persuade the economy back to health?

First the Bank would need to set an explicit target for NGDP growth. It would have to promise to buy unlimited quantities of assets (using newly created money) to achieve this target. As it set about its task, month by month, trillion by trillion, people would come to accept its commitment to the policy and begin to spend in the expectation of future inflation. The expected numbers would drive the real numbers. Spending would rise and the real resources of the economy would be fully employed, which would achieve the Bank's 5% NGDP growth target.

Hang on - what about hyperinflation?

Is market monetarism, then, nothing more than a justification for money printing? According to the theorists, it's the promise that matters – not the asset purchases. Asset purchases are no more than a means to the end of justifying the promise. If people believe that the central bank will keep printing until it achieves its desired target (let's say it's 5% NGDP), then the promise will work. The central bank can then end its asset-buying when it hits the 5% target – or even reverse it if necessary.

What about quantitative easing (QE)? QE looks like a market monetarist policy, and it doesn't look like a success. But Nick Rowe of Carleton University argues that Western central banks missed the point with current QE policies – they printed the money without making the promise. Nobody who looks at the Federal Reserve's divided board, for example, expects it to print unlimited assets to reflate the US economy.

So expectations of inflation stay low, growth stays low, returns stay low, interest rates stay low and the bloated money supply sits on the banks' balance sheets with nowhere to go. QE hasn't worked because it has been piecemeal.

NGDP targeting implies that inflation can be a good thing – if it raises overall spending and incomes and thus, demand. In demand-deficient economies, more paper money can mean more real growth. Scott Sumner, a scholar of the Great Depression, points, for example, to the fact that much of the world inflated its way out of the trough in 1933 by leaving the gold standard and allowing prices to rise.

The chart below shows how this worked: the countries whose currencies weakened the most between 1929 and 1933 also saw the greatest gains in industrial production. For example, Finland and Denmark saw the value of their currencies just about half, while production rose by more than 20%. (The black line loosely shows the relationship between the exchange rate and industrial production).

Changes in exchange rates and industrial production, 1929-1935

Changes in exchange rates and industrial production, 1929-1935

 
What market monetarism does not say is that monetary policy can induce ever-higher levels of growth. Growth is always subject to supply-side constraints (ie your existing stock of factories and workers can only generate so much activity), after which point new money stimulates prices and not output.

Economist John Taylor worries about the specifics of the plan. He notes that it is unclear exactly what instruments NGDP targeting proponents would use to raise inflation expectations. And Amity Schlaes at Bloomberg wonders whether inflation would come to dominate the 5% growth in nominal output.

Enter Ben Bernankbot and RoboKing

And this is where we get to the 'market' part of market monetarism (MMT for short). Ultimately, the logic of MMT leads to a world without central bankers.

If a market for NGDP futures were established (ie enabling investors to bet on where they thought economic growth was heading), then the central bank could simply conduct whatever monetary policy directed the NGDP futures price towards the stated NGDP growth target.

In the end, the NGDP futures markets could replace central bankers. In this world, monetary policy could be managed by a computer, conducting whatever policy nudged NGDP futures markets onto the target. In fact, saying that monetary policy is managed by a robot isn't quite accurate – really it's being managed by the markets, which is what advocates of scrapping central banks altogether often say is what should be happening.

It's an appealing vision. The western world is stuck for solutions, and desperate. Sumner offers an easy answer, and in practice we suspect it'd be a lot harder to implement. But if you must have a central bank, then increasing the market's role in setting rates, and shrinking the influence of politics, and fallible human central bankers, on the process, can only be a good thing.

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  • 1. marcus nunes

    (13 January 2012, 06:42PM)  Complain about this comment

    Only one quibble: Don´t call Market Monetarists"MMT". That moniker refers to "Modern Monetary Theory" a very different scholl of thought!

  • 2. Critic Al Rick

    (13 January 2012, 11:12PM)  Complain about this comment

    Wasn't it the increased intervention of computerisation into the realms of CDS, etc which complicated the interdependence of banks? Robots are made and computers are programmed by fallible humans, often those without commonsense.

    NGDP or whatever, we're all going to 'hell' now anyway. Mr Market and commonsense (as opposed to academics) should have been allowed to dictate policy from decades ago.

    We're led by virtual robots now - zombified humans. Self-perpetuating self-destruction from the self-gratifying self-congratulatory.

    Happy New Year!

  • 3. Adrian Costain

    (14 January 2012, 12:15PM)  Complain about this comment

    MMT & NGDP; interesting concepts for the Sustainable Capitalism debate of 2012. An equally salient debate is emerging regarding the concept of market 'Pre-distribution,' correcting the market distortions of crony capitalism. Both proposals require a 'fit for purpose' retail banking system, which distributes the new money, with fidelity, efficiently and effectively through the economy for investment purposes. In the UK a sound easing programme would re-direct resources into the regions; axiomatically this is where industrial production (and innovative SME investment) must be bootstrapped. The other significant defect in QE type solutions is that they tend to redistribute wealth from mature investors to relatively youthful borrowers. Unfortunately, the next cohort of private sector pensioners in the UK are struggling to recover from previous raids on their funds. Thus, the market kilter imperative means the cost of funds has eventually to return to long term averages.

  • 4. Ian

    (14 January 2012, 12:23PM)  Complain about this comment

    This idea is baesd on the idea that all recessions are bad.

    Is this a bi-product of the dumbed down, nobody's a loser, nobody takes the blame culture, where every business, no matter how pointless or unproductive, must survive?

    Recessions cause incorrect decisions to be punished. The lenders lose their money and the business owner must start afresh with a better idea.

    Am I just being harsh? Or are the dog-walking, grass-greening wedding-planning - esque businesses really giving us the productive edge in this globalised world?

  • 5. Sean Keyes

    (14 January 2012, 01:08PM)  Complain about this comment

    @Ian: The idea isn't to suppress recessions as such, as to keep demand anchored stably. It seeks to suppress demand-side recessions, unnecessary recessions.

    Supply or productivity shocks - say higher oil prices or a tech boom or a natural disaster etc - can't be avoided. They'd change the composition of the 5% NGDP growth number. In a recession a higher proportion of the 5% growth number would be rising prices; in a boom a higher proportion would be higher real growth.

    NGDP targeting wouldn't prevent the economic dead wood from being cleared away. Far from it - it would mean that dead auto companies and banks and the like could go under without politicians having to worry about dragging GDP down with them.

  • 6. Sean Keyes

    (14 January 2012, 01:18PM)  Complain about this comment

    @marcus nunes - dead right, my error

    @ critic al rick - better real robots than virtual robot impersonators eh!

    @adrian costain - QE-type solutions aren't so bad for older investors if they pump up equity markets...

    @Adrian Costain - working banks would help alright!

  • 7. Ghenghero

    (14 January 2012, 03:35PM)  Complain about this comment

    Why can't central banks focus on wat really matter... REAL GDP and non NGDP. When RGDP growth we all leave better...not so sure of NGDP.

  • 8. Nothing Better To Do

    (14 January 2012, 08:22PM)  Complain about this comment

    Better still return to a gold standard and no central banks. No inflation, no manipulation by politicians, no illegal wars, no vast government regulation/repression.

  • 9. Sean Keyes

    (15 January 2012, 03:25PM)  Complain about this comment

    @nothing better to do: The problem with going back on the gold standard is that we've already broken the promise never to leave it! That genie cant be put back in the bottle. Should money get too tight on the GS, we'd just leave it again. Again, the promise is what matters.

    If we trust our central bankers not to leave the GS, then we don't need the GS in the first place!

  • 10. Critic Al Rick

    (17 January 2012, 12:17AM)  Complain about this comment

    @ 6.

    No Sean! Robots, real or virtual, are not going to solve this Mess.

    Indeed, there is probably no way, short of a miracle, the status quo is going to solve this Mess; if it's not conspiring to beggar us, it's insane.

  • 11. Jeff

    (18 January 2012, 06:23PM)  Complain about this comment

    I've put a third of our resources in to gold bullion. I started three years ago, despite many "expert" commentators said that gold was a useless investment that paid no dividends, and likely to crash in value. I know that it's a cliche, but governments can't print gold. Here's to gold at $2500!

  • 12. sajrc

    (18 January 2012, 08:26PM)  Complain about this comment

    capitalism only works with inflation,our only way out of this mess is inflation print the money but give it to the people not banks.Everybody takes a pay cut rich and poor,we should prevent the situation of too big to fail,let them fail.Shareholders should be given greater powers to stop idiots paying themselves for failure.Europe should be just a trading partner that's what we voted for,it should be unlawful for a government to exceed its authority on the peoples wishes.The government takes the credit for keeping out of the Euro they didn't Soros did.

  • 13. Rob

    (18 January 2012, 10:10PM)  Complain about this comment

    If it works, and stimulates demand for raw materials and energy, then we'll just hit the buffers even sooner. We need to find a way to create a steady sustainable economy. Growth forever in a finite world cannot be possible. Another point: We need to measure Real GDP - wealth we actually produce - not all this illusory money shuffling. We then base our standard of living on the wealth we actually have created.

  • 14. Nick Hays

    (19 January 2012, 04:06AM)  Complain about this comment

    Given the known inefficiencies and inherent instability of markets, does anyone else see the problem in using a single market mechanism (NGDP futures) to guide central bank policy?

  • 15. janetH

    (19 January 2012, 08:25AM)  Complain about this comment

    "growth is always subject to supply side constraints' you say........... but you forget to mention that Gordon Brown changed the taxation of empty factories. Many owners of empty factories knocked them down, so we can't produce full employment in this country anyway, no matter how much money printing we do!

  • 16. Seán Keyes

    (19 January 2012, 09:30AM)  Complain about this comment

    @Jeff - good luck to you! Holding gold in a MM world might not work out too well though - Id speculate - since real interest rates and inflation would be capped at -5%/5%!

    @sajrc - The MM crowd see inflation as the way out of this particular trap alright.

    @Rob - RGDP is of course what matters, ultimately. The MM school believe, counterintuitively, that you maximise RGDP by targeting NGDP.
    Growth ultimately comes from new technologies, new ideas, and new laws. The stock of them fortunately is infinite. Though it's a separate debate as to how much growth new ideas will furnish us with in the coming decades...
    As for stimulating demand, well demand would be stimulated for good things like haircuts and mobile phones as much as raw materials and energy!

  • 17. Seán Keyes

    (19 January 2012, 09:30AM)  Complain about this comment

    @Nick Hays - I'd trust markets before Id trust the BoE's MPC! If they or the fed had paid attention to what markets were telling them late in 2008 we wouldn't be in the hole!

    @janetH - good point. Bad policy will hurt real GDP and real living standards. If a government with a MM regime made bad policy decisions then prices would rise faster than incomes. But unemployment would be lower with bad policy + full demand under MM than with bad policy + deficient demand under the status quo.

  • 18. Graded Grain

    (19 January 2012, 04:42PM)  Complain about this comment

    I put this interesting essay to my Grandson (at LSE) who comments:

    It is indeed very interesting article and getting rid of central bankers certainly seems like something Ron Paul might like. However, it is monetarist/ economic right wing rubbish.

    Replacing Mervyn King with a robot and thus ensuring credibility of targets is one thing and taking politics out of monetary policy would be beneficial. It was thinking like this that made the BoE independent in 1997 and led to the setting of a 2.0 target. This has clearly not been achieved in recent years largely first because of cost push inflation (commodity price rises not determined by expectations) and then gluts in demand, however I should imagine if interest rates did rise to a level that would have brought it to target half the country would be unemployed and investment would be nil. A robot is then not necessarily a good thing then.

    contd.

  • 19. Martin Debank

    (19 January 2012, 05:16PM)  Complain about this comment

    Looking for constant growth is no different from trying to avoid death. Its unrealistic.Everything dies.Nothing lasts for ever.
    Nothing grows for ever.
    Bankers, economists and pundits need to get real. Remember Gordon Brown the boom and bust cycle broken for ever.What a laugh.
    These crackpot theories about the Bank of England being able to influence economic movement permanently belong with the snake oil salesman. In the bin.

  • 20. Seán Keyes

    (20 January 2012, 09:30AM)  Complain about this comment

    @graded grain - As far as I'm concerned cost-push and demand-pull inflation do not exist. They're relics of a time when thinking on inflation was muddled. "inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon"

    More or less constant growth is an empirical fact since the industrial revolution.

    Fluctuations around that growth can be large or small. Good monetary policy minimizes those deviations. MM could be a step toward smaller deviations around that growth.

    *Also, do not mistake constant 5% NGDP growth for constant 5% RGDP growth. Recessions are a fact of life. See comment no. 5.

  • 21. sajrc

    (20 January 2012, 06:11PM)  Complain about this comment

    the MM crowd are right and you are wrong OK

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