Category Monetary policy

Real Interest on Reserves

A central bank issues currency and wants to target the price of apples in terms of that currency. So it opens an apple window, and posts a sign promising to buy or sell unlimited quantities of apples at $1 each. Done. Arbitrage ensures that the market price of apples in the economy is always $1 […]

Long Run Growth and the end of The End of (Monetary Policy) History

Suppose everyone believes that we have reached The End of History, as far as monetary policy is concerned. The new inflation-targeting regime adopted by central banks has finally solved the age-old problem of the business cycle. There will be no more booms and busts. Maybe not yet solved perfectly, but the broad outlines of the […]

Apple Prices and Core Inflation

An economy produces two goods: apples and haircuts. The production function for apples shifts up or down every year at random, depending on the weather. The production function for haircuts never shifts. The weather causes relative prices to change. When there is good weather, and the apple harvest is large, the price of haircuts in […]

Hume’s Sailing Ships correcting Samuelson’s Icebergs

Paul Samuelson said (PITA gated) that David Hume's price-specie flow mechanism (ungated) was wrong. And I am saying, nervously biting my fingernails, that Samuelson was wrong. Assume that durable sailing ships are costly to build, but have low (or zero for simplicity) operating costs. Assume apples are the only tradeable good, and one ship can […]

AD/AS: a suggested interpretation

Many macroeconomists don't like the Aggregate Demand/Aggregate Supply framework often used in Introductory macro textbooks. Maybe that's because it isn't explained properly. So I am going to explain it my way. If you explain the AD/AS framework my way, you will see that it portrays a deep and realistic understanding of macroeconomics that is lost […]

Understanding Banks and Two Monetary Policy Instruments

Sometimes I write posts about things I don't understand and want to understand. (Or don't understand very well and want to understand better.) This is one of those posts. Suppose the government nationalises all the commercial banks, and merges them into the Bank of Canada. And suppose the Bank of Canada abolishes paper currency. So […]

John Cochrane On Neo-Fisherianism, again

First I am going to give you the intuition behind the model in John Cochrane's new paper. It's a very good paper, though I confess I've only skimmed it, because it's very long, and I don't understand all the math. Then I'm going to explain what I think is wrong with it. Then I'm going […]

Price Level vs Inflation Rate: semantic clarity

I write this for journalists, first year economics students, and the general (non-economist) public. Yes I'm being pedantic. But I hope it helps. I'm trying to clear up a very common confusion in how we talk about inflation. Your car has an odometer, which measures kilometers driven. And your car has a speedometer, which measures […]

From ISLM to NK Macro

Let me try it this way. This is written for macro students, and their teachers. But it's aimed at researchers too. It's about the role of money in macro models. Ignore what New Keynesian macroeconomists say about their own models. Listen to me instead. Start with the second-year textbook ISLM model. The price level P […]

Financial Assets > Liabilities

Take Bitcoin for example. It's a financial asset to whoever holds it. To whom is it a financial liability? I suppose you could say "it is a liability to the whole community of those who accept Bitcoin in exchange for goods". But that answer seems like a desperate attempt to salvage the assets=liabilities dogma. Nobody […]