Category Monetary policy

What’s special about monetary coordination failures?

This is a response to Brad DeLong's and David Glasner's good posts. They are good posts because they forced me to think. This is what I think. [I really ought to spend more time on this post, but I am a little snowed under with committee work at present. Sorry.]

Fractional reserves, capital, communism, and the optimum quantity of money

Just trying to get my head clearer on some related stuff. I have a weird thought-experiment, that I think helps us understand fractional reserve banking better. Even though, paradoxically, there are no commercial banks in my thought-experiment. There is just One Big Bank, owned and controlled by the government, that issues the only form of […]

Suppose that printing money were irreversible

Suppose, just suppose, that you believed that printing money was irreversible, or just very hard to reverse. So central banks could increase the supply of base money by printing money, but could not (or could not easily) reduce the supply of base money again by burning money. And suppose you knew that central banks had […]

Three meanings of “printing money causes inflation”

This is supposed to be a very simple post, mainly for non-economists. "Printing money causes inflation" can mean three different things. What I will say here should be obvious to economists, but I'm not sure if it is obvious to non-economists. And it makes me wonder if sometimes things get lost in translation. Maybe, just […]

How to destroy the “neoliberal consensus”

C'mon guys. If you are going to put forward a lefty conspiracy theory to explain why monetary policy is tighter than you (and I) think it should be, you at least need to get your story straight.

Why are lawyers against higher inflation?

An extremely quick Google search convinces me that lawyers are massively over-represented in the Canadian Parliament. I am quite sure that something similar is true in other countries too. Lawyers are far more powerful in setting government policy than are ordinary middle-class people like me. So if we want to understand why monetary policy is […]

It’s the Inflation Fallacy, duh!

Paul Krugman is wasting his time trying to figure out why the rich and powerful don't like inflation. There's a simple answer, that also explains why the non-rich and non-powerful don't like inflation either. And you don't need any fancy political economy to figure out the answer. If you want to know why non-economists don't […]

A simple question about Walras Law

Inspired by Free Radical's post, I think I have figured out a simpler and clearer way to say what I want to say about Walras' Law. Ask yourself the following question: Q. Assume an economy where there are (say) 7 markets. Suppose 6 of those markets are in equilibrium (with quantity demanded equal to quantity […]

Interest rates, asset prices, and the rich

Does anybody here remember 1982? When interest rates went very high, and so asset prices went very low. Just the opposite of today. What were people saying back then? 1. Were they saying: "Central banks are setting high interest rates and making asset prices low, which is bad for the rich, who own all the […]

The ECB cannot move last

I think this diagram helps us understand the Eurozone problem in simple game-theoretic terms: