Paul
Krugman
OPINION
Wonking Out: How Low Must Inflation Go?
June 3,
2022
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/06/03/opinion/inflation-federal-reserve.html
Paul
Krugman
By Paul
Krugman
Opinion
Columnist
As I
pointed out in my latest column, the politics of inflation are dominated by concerns
about gasoline and food prices — precisely the prices over which policymakers
in general, and the president in particular, have the least influence.
Economists, by contrast, usually focus on measures that try to get at
underlying inflation, excluding highly volatile stuff like, well, energy and
food.
Actually,
the traditional definition of “core” inflation — the one usually used by the
Federal Reserve — which excludes only energy and food, has been problematic in
the post-pandemic era. Why? Because we’ve been seeing some wild fluctuations in
other prices, like used cars. So there’s growing emphasis on other measures of
core inflation, like the Dallas Fed’s “trimmed mean” measure, which excludes
extreme price movements in either direction. You can see the difference in this
figure, which shows three-month rates of change in the two measures since 2020
(month to month is too noisy, whereas annual changes lag too far behind
events):
Traditional
core inflation has been highly variable, the alternative measure less so. Both
measures, however, have eased off lately. It looks as if underlying inflation
is running at something like 3.5 to 4 percent.
Easing inflation
is good. But we’re still well above 2 percent inflation, which the Fed and
other central banks have traditionally seen as their target. And the Fed is set
to continue tightening until that target is hit.
So why is 2
percent the target? I’m not going to crusade against the 2 percent solution.
But anyone interested in economic policy should know that the history of how 2
percent came to define “price stability” is peculiar, and that the argument for
keeping that target is grounded less in straightforward economics than in
almost metaphysical concerns about credibility.
One way to
see the peculiarity of 2 percent is to take a longer view of inflation, going
back to 1984, the year of “morning in America.” At the time, the United States
was experiencing rapid economic growth because the Fed, which had squeezed the
economy extremely hard to end double-digit inflation, had relaxed monetary
policy because, in its view, inflation had been vanquished. By 1984, and for
the rest of the 1980s, the Fed felt comfortable about inflation because it was
running at around only 4 percent:
The point,
of course, is that during Ronald Reagan’s second term, America’s underlying
inflation rate was roughly what it is now. Yet policymakers were strutting
around boasting about their victory over inflation, and the public didn’t see
inflation as a major concern:
So how did
4 percent inflation come to be considered excessive and 2 percent acquire
sacred status? It’s a long story, in which New Zealand, of all places, played a
crucial role.
But the
short answer is that 2 percent seemed to offer an easy answer to a dispute
between economists who wanted true price stability — zero inflation — and
those, including a guy named Larry Summers, who thought we needed somewhat
positive inflation to preserve the Fed’s ability to fight recessions. The
stable-price crowd was willing to believe that 2 percent was actually zero,
because conventional inflation measures understated the benefits of
technological progress. The room-to-act crowd believed that 2 percent was high
enough that the Fed would rarely end up cutting interest rates all the way to
zero and finding that it wasn’t enough.
As it
turned out, however, this latter judgment was all wrong. The Fed and other
central banks have spent much of the past 15 years with interest rates as low
as they can go, desperately seeking other tools to stimulate their economies:
As a result,
a number of economists have suggested that the inflation target should be
raised. For example, in 2010 Olivier Blanchard, then the chief economist of the
International Monetary Fund, made the case for an inflation target as high as 4
percent. I made similar arguments to the European Central Bank a bit later.
None of
these arguments got much real-world traction, however, perhaps because central
bankers weren’t convinced that a higher inflation target would help them very
much. But right now we face a different question: How much are we prepared to
pay to get back to 2 percent?
Again, if
the Fed were to apply the standards that prevailed in the 1980s, it would
consider the current rate of inflation acceptable and declare victory. Instead,
it’s putting a squeeze on credit markets and risking at least a mild recession
to get us down to 2 percent from 4 percent. Why? It’s not because there’s a
compelling economic case. As Blanchard and his co-authors asked back in 2010,
“Are the net costs of inflation much higher at, say, 4 percent than at 2
percent?” There’s no real evidence to that effect.
As best I
can tell, the main reason Fed officials are insistent on getting back to 2
percent is concern about credibility. They fear that if they ease off at, say,
3 percent inflation, markets and the public will wonder whether they will
eventually accept 4 percent, then 5 percent and so on. One reassuring aspect of
the current bout of rising prices is that longer-term inflation expectations
have remained “anchored,” so that there are no signs of a 1970s-type wage-price
spiral. Giving up on the 2 percent target might risk losing this anchor.
Being
honest, if I were a decision maker at the Fed, I would probably have the same
concerns. But it seems important to realize that if we are about to have a
recession, which is certainly possible, it won’t be because hard economic
considerations require that we squeeze inflation all the way back down to 2
percent. What we’re seeing instead is monetary policy driven by softer, vaguer
concerns about credibility. We live in peculiar times.
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


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