Category Nick Rowe
Towards a Monetarist theory of Neo-Chartalism
I am going to start with an orthodox monetarist approach, make one trivial semantic change, and see how far I can get in deriving Neo–Chartalist results. The semantic change is to change what I mean by "fiscal policy". It's an unconventional definition of fiscal policy, from a monetarist perspective, but I don't think a monetarist […]
Churches and Central Banks
If a social scientist wanted to understand what happens in church, he could ask the churchgoers themselves for an account of what they do in church. But the social scientist's account of what happens in church need not be the same as the churchgoers' account. If an economist wanted to understand what happens in a […]
Why do central banks have assets?
If you look at the balance sheet of a central bank, you will see it has liabilities (mostly currency) and assets (normally mostly government bonds/bills). Why do central banks have assets? Do they need them? The wrong answer is that central banks need assets to "back" the value of the currency, and that paper currency […]
What makes a bank a central bank? Asymmetric redeemability and the will to act as one.
Both central banks and commercial banks issue liabilities that function as media of exchange. Why do we say that it is central banks, rather than commercial banks, that determine monetary policy; setting interest rates in the short run, and inflation in the long run? What makes a bank a central bank?
Economic growth, the universe, and the meaning of life
Notes for a panel discussion in Ottawa on Tuesday evening (details below). 200 years ago, economists made a prediction, and we got it wrong. "Big deal" you might say. But it was a big deal; a much bigger deal than some piddling mistake like failing to predict a global financial crisis. Basically, 200 years ago […]
Why can’t the Fed just buy yuan?
The title really says it all. And it's not a rhetorical question; I don't know the answer. But if the US is really concerned (H/T Mark Thoma) about the US dollar being too high against China's yuan, and it believes China is "artificially" preventing the yuan from appreciating against the dollar by foreign exchange market […]
Cheap talk and the exchange rate
Why does the Loonie appreciate when the Bank of Canada tightens monetary policy (relative to what was expected)? And depreciate when the Bank loosens monetary policy (relative to what was expected)? Before you conclude I've lost it, by asking such an easy question, consider the following weird thought-experiment.
Flashbacks to the 1970’s: the Bank of Canada and the deficit
Doug Peters and Arthur Donner (names I remember from the 1970s debate over inflation in Canada) have an opinion piece in the Toronto Star on the role of the Bank of Canada in reducing the budget deficit. It starts out fine, but ends in a non-sequitur.
That’s not shadow banking, that’s the stock and bond markets
Paul Krugman has a flow chart showing flows of savings from ultimate lenders to ultimate borrowers. One arrow goes via the banks. Paul labels it "traditional banking"; that's fine. People deposit their savings in banks, and the banks lend those savings to other people or firms. But a second arrow goes directly from "the public" […]
Journalism and Economics
Brad De Long thinks very highly of Greg Ip, even when Brad thinks Greg gets something wrong. Brad thinks Greg is very sharp. So do I. But the other reason why Greg Ip is such a good economic journalist is that he was thoroughly trained in both Journalism and Economics. And I'm very proud to […]
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