PAUL
KRUGMAN
Who’s Afraid of the Big Bad Boom?
May 6, 2021
By Paul
Krugman
Opinion
Columnist
“If it
rains, we might want to open our umbrellas,” said the Treasury secretary.
“Oh my God,
she’s predicting a torrential downpour,” shouted panicked pundits.
OK, that’s
not exactly what Janet Yellen said on Tuesday. Her actual words were, “It may
be that interest rates will have to rise somewhat to make sure that our economy
doesn’t overheat.” Her remark wasn’t a forecast, it certainly wasn’t an attempt
to influence the Federal Reserve, and it was simple good sense.
Still, she
shouldn’t have said it. Convention says that the nation’s top economic official
must avoid uttering even the most obvious economic truths, even if she happens
to be a world-class economist, lest they be read as signals of … something. And
the financial media rushed to declare her remarks a scandalous deviation from
the Biden administration’s official line.
Luckily,
the furor was short-lived, and as these things go, Yellen’s moment of honesty
wasn’t a big deal. Market expectations of future monetary policy, as reflected
in long-term interest rates, don’t seem to have moved at all in the past couple
months.
But the
hair-trigger media response was part of a broader phenomenon: Many commentators
just don’t seem able to keep any perspective about the bumps and blips of a
booming economy.
There
definitely is a boom underway, even if a vast majority of Republicans claim to
believe that the economy is getting worse. All indications are that we’re
headed for the fastest year of growth since the “Morning in America” boom of
1983-1984. What’s not to like?
Well,
booming economies often run into temporary bottlenecks, which show up in
surging prices for selected goods. For example, the price of copper tripled
between December 2008 and February 2011, even though recovery from the 2008
recession was fairly sluggish.
The
bottleneck problem is especially severe now, because the pandemic slump was, to
use the technical term, weird, and so is the recovery now underway. Consumer
spending didn’t follow the patterns it exhibits in a conventional recession,
and we’re now facing unusual disruptions as a result.
The great
lumber shortage is a case in point. Outlays on housing usually plunge in a
recession. In 2020, however, with many people stuck at home, Americans actually
splurged on home improvements. Lumber producers didn’t see that coming and
scaled back, leaving them without enough capacity to meet demand. So the price
of two-by-fours has gone through the (unaffordable) roof.
But do such
bottlenecks pose a risk to overall recovery? Do they mean that policymakers
need to pull back? No. The overwhelming lesson of the past 15 years or so is
that short-term fluctuations in raw material prices tell you nothing about
future inflation, and that policymakers that overreact to these fluctuations —
like the European Central Bank, which raised interest rates in the midst of a
debt crisis because it was spooked by commodity prices — are always sorry in
retrospect.
Raw
material shortages, then, aren’t a major problem. What about labor shortages?
Many
employers are currently complaining that they can’t find enough workers,
despite widespread joblessness; Federal Reserve officials believe that the true
unemployment rate is still close to 10 percent. How seriously should we take
these complaints?
As it
happens, I’ve been poring over a report titled “U.S. Small Businesses Struggle
to Find Qualified Employees.” The report summarized a survey conducted by
Gallup and Wells Fargo, which found a majority of businesses saying that it was
hard to hire workers.
Oh, did I
mention the date on the report? Feb. 15, 2013 — a time when there were three
unemployed workers for every job opening. There was, in fact, no shortage of
qualified labor, and the unemployment rate kept falling for another seven
years.
So what was
that about? Employers in a depressed economy get used to being able to fill
vacancies easily. When the economy improves hiring gets a bit harder; sometimes
you have to attract workers by offering higher wages. And employers experience
that as a labor shortage.
But that’s
how the economy is supposed to work! Employers competing for workers by raising
wages isn’t a problem, it’s what we want to see.
Does all of
this mean that there are no limits to the economy’s expansion, and that
inflation can never become a problem? Of course not. But spot shortages of a
few goods and a robust market for labor aren’t reasons to panic.
We should
get worried only if we see one of two things: evidence that expectations of continuing
inflation are getting embedded in price-setting decisions, and/or evidence that
the economy is getting hugely overheated.
So far
there’s no evidence for the first potential problem — and the Biden
administration is reportedly watching carefully for such evidence.
As for
overheating: Yes, it could be an issue. We’ve just passed a very large economic
relief package, and households are sitting on huge savings. So an excessive
boom is possible. But if that happens, the Fed can and, I believe, will tap on
the brakes — something I can say because, thankfully, I’m not a public
official.
Paul
Krugman has been an Opinion columnist since 2000 and is also a Distinguished
Professor at the City University of New York Graduate Center. He won the 2008
Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences for his work on international trade
and economic geography. @PaulKrugman


Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário