Category: Essentials of Economics: Ch 12

Inflation’s rising again! After a year of falling inflation, with CPI inflation being below the Bank of England’s target of 2% since June 2009, inflation began rising again in October 2009 and then shot up in December. In the year to November 2009, CPI inflation was 1.9%. In the year to December it had risen to 2.9% – well above the 2% target. As the National Statistics article states, however:

This record increase is due to a number of exceptional events that took place in December 2008:

  • the reduction in the standard rate of Value Added Tax (VAT) to 15 per cent from 17.5 per cent
  • sharp falls in the price of oil
  • pre-Christmas sales as a result of the economic downturn
  • These exceptional events led to the CPI falling by 0.4 per cent between November and December 2008 (a record fall between these two months). The CPI increase between November and December 2009 of 0.6 per cent is far more typical (the CPI increased by 0.6 per cent between November and December in both 2006 and 2007). These exceptional events also affected the change in the RPI annual rate.

    So what should the Bank of England do? 2.9% is well above the target of 2%. So should the Monetary Policy Committee raise interest rates at its next meeting? The answer is no. Although inflation is above target, the Bank of England is concerned with predicted inflation in 24 months’ time. Almost certainly, the rate of inflation will fall back as the special factors, such as the increase in VAT back to 17.5% and earlier falls in VAT and oil prices, fall out of the annual data.

    What is more, the sudden rise in CPI inflation is almost entirely due to cost-push factors, not demand-pull ones. Rises in costs have a dampening effect on demand. Raising interest rates in these circumstances would further dampen demand – the last thing you want to do as the economy is beginning a fragile recovery from recession.

    The Bank of England’s policy recognises that the prime determinant of inflation over the medium term is aggregate demand relative to potential output. For this reason it doesn’t respond to temporary supply-side (cost) shocks.

    Avoid false alarm over UK inflation Financial Times (20/1/10)
    Oh dear. Inflation is back again Telegraph, Jeremy Warner (19/1/10)
    Mervyn King confident on inflation target Times Online, Grainne Gilmore (19/1/10)
    How should we remember 2009? As the year the Bank of England’s inflation target died Telegraph, Jeremy Warner (20/1/10)
    An embarrassing bungee-jump The Economist (21/1/10)
    Priced in BBC News, Stephanomics, Stephanie Flanders’ blog (19/1/10)
    This MPC is not fit for purpose New Statesman, David Blanchflower (21/1/10)
    Jobs joy takes sting out of inflation misery Sunday Times, David Smith (24/1/10)

    For CPI inflation data, see Consumer Prices Index (CPI) National Statistics

    Questions

    1. For what reasons might inflation be expected to fall back to 2% later in the year?
    2. Does the rise in inflation to 2.9% put pressure on the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) to raise interest rates? Explain why or why not.
    3. What factors is the MPC likely to consider at its February meeting when deciding whether or not to embark on a further round of quantitative easing?
    4. What effects has the depreciation of sterling had on inflation? Explain whether this effect is likely to continue and what account of it should be taken by the MPC when setting interest rates.
    5. What is meant by ‘core inflation’? Why did this rise to 2.8% in December 2009?
    6. What is the role of expectations in determining (a) inflation and (b) real GDP in 24 months’ time?
    7. Why, according to David Blanchflower, is the MPC not ‘fit for purpose’?

    At the start of the new decade, many commentators are getting out their crystal balls to take a look into the future. Below you will find a selection of their predictions, including six extracts from The Economist’s ‘The World in 2010’.

    In 2009, the world economy shrank for the first time since 1945. Will it now bounce back, or will global recovery be slow, or will there be a ‘double-dip recession’ with output falling once more before sustained recovery eventally sets in? And what about particular economies? How will the UK fare compared with other countries? How will the USA and the eurozone perform? Will China and India be the powerhouses of global recovery?

    Then there is the whole question of the financial sector. Is it now fixed? Will businesses and consumers have sufficient access to credit – is the credit crunch over? Has toxic debt been expunged from the banking system? Do banks now have sufficient capital?

    And what about debt? Even though private-sector debt is falling in many countries as households and businesses scale back borrowing and as banks have imposed tighter lending criteria, public-sector debt is soaring around the world. Will financial markets continue to support these growing levels of sovereign debt? Will central banks have to continue with quantitative easing in order to support these levels of debt and to keep interest rates down?

    Economic Outlook: 2010 may narrow gap Financial Times, Chris Flood (27/12/09)
    CIPD Annual Barometer Forecast: UK economy to shed a further 250,000 jobs before unemployment peaks at 2.8 million in 2010 Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development (CIPD) (21/12/09)
    Unemployment ‘set to peak in 2010’ Guardian (29/12/09)
    Unemployment ‘will peak at 2.8m’ in 2010 BBC News (29/12/09)
    What employment prospects lie ahead in 2010? BBC News, Shanaz Musafer (3/1/10)
    Money printing scheme is working, Bank of England says Times Online, Gráinne Gilmore and Francesca Steele (1/1/10)
    Bank optimism rises as credit to business eases Guardian, Ashley Seager (31/12/09)
    The world in 2010: China continues its unstoppable economic charge Independent, Alistair Dawber (2/1/10)
    The US slowly emerges from the gloom of 2009 Independent, Alistair Dawber (2/1/10)
    Year dominated by weak dollar Financial Times, Anjli Raval (2/1/10)
    A year when tipsters took a tumble Times Online, David Wighton (1/1/10)
    PMEAC pegs growth at 8% in ’10-11 Times of India (2/1/10)
    China and the other Brics will rebuild a new world economic order The Observer, Ashley Seager (3/1/10)
    Five countries that crashed and burned in the credit crunch face a hard road to recovery The Observer, Heather Stewart, Ashley Seager, David Teather, Richard Wachman and Zoe Wood (3/1/10)
    HSBC goes out on a limb and predicts growth beyond dreams of Chancellor Times Online, Gráinne Gilmore (2/1/10)
    Uncertainty dogs sterling Financial Times, Peter Garnham (2/1/10)
    A tough year to forecast as recovery hangs in the balance Scotsman, George Kerevan (30/12/09)
    Unstable equilibrium in 2010 BBC News blogs, Peston’s Picks (30/12/09)
    Intriguing economic questions for 2010 BBC News blogs, Stephanomics (23/12/09)
    The hard slog ahead The Economist (13/11/09)
    In the wake of a crisis The Economist (13/11/09)
    Now for the long term The Economist, Matthew Bishop (13/11/09)
    Recessionomics The Economist, Anatole Kaletsky (13/11/09)
    The World in 2010: From the editor The Economist, Michael Pilkington (13/11/09)
    The hard slog ahead The Economist (13/11/09)

    For forecasts of various economies and regions see
    World Economic Outlook (OECD)
    European Economic Forecast – autumn 2009 (European Commission)
    Tables set A and Tables set B from World Economic Outlook (IMF)

    Questions

    1. What is likely to happen to the major economies of the world in 2010?
    2. How much reliance should be placed on macroeconomic forecasts for the medium term (1 or 2 years)?
    3. For what reasons might the UK economy fare (a) better or (b) worse than forecast?
    4. Why has unemployment risen less in the UK, and many other countries too, during the current recession compared to previous recessions? Does the flexibility of labour markets affect the amount that unemployment rises during a period of declining aggregate demand?
    5. Why may the world face a ‘long hard slog’ in recovering from recession?
    6. Why is the world in 2010 ‘balanced precariously’ and why are there huge uncertainties? (See Robert Peston’s blog.)
    7. Why are China and India likely to see much faster rates of economic growth than the USA, the EU and Japan?
    8. What is likely to happen to stock markets over the coming 12 months? What will be the main factors influencing the demand for and supply of shares?
    9. What fiscal and monetary policies are most appropriate during the coming 12 months?

    Should economists have foreseen the credit crunch? A few were warning of an overheated world economy with excessive credit and risk taking. Most economists prior to 2007/8, however, were predicting a continuation of steady economic growth. Inflation targeting, fiscal rules and increasingly flexible markets were the ingredients of this continuing prosperity. And then the crash happened!

    So why did so few people see the downturn coming? Were the models used by economists fundamentally flawed, or was it simply a question of poor assumptions or poor data? Do we need a new way of modelling the economy, or is it simply a question of updating theories from the past? Should, for example, models become much more Keynesian? Should we abandon the new classical approach of assuming that markets are essentially good at pricing in risk and that herd behaviour will not be seriously destabilising?

    The following podcast looks at these issues. “Aditya Chakrabortty’s joined in the studio by the Guardian’s economics editor Larry Elliott, as well as Roger Bootle, the managing director of Capital Economics, and political economist and John Maynard Keynes biographer Robert Skidelsky. Also in the podcast, we hear from Nobel prize-winning economist, Elinor Ostrom, Freakonomics author Steven Levitt, and UN advisor and developmental economist Daniel Gay.”

    The Business: A crisis of economics Guardian podcast (25/11/09)

    See also the following news items from the Sloman Economics news site:
    Keynes is dead; long live Keynes (3/10/09)
    Learning from history (3/10/09)
    Macroeconomics – Crisis or what? (6/8/09)
    The changing battle grounds of economics (27/7/09)
    Repeat of the Great Depression – or learning the lessons from the past? (23/6/09)
    Animal spirits (30/4/09)
    Keynes – do we need him more than ever? (26/10/08)

    Questions

    1. Why did most economists fail to predict the credit crunch and subsequent recession? Was it a problem with the models that were used or the data that was put into these models, or both?
    2. What was the Washington consensus? To what extent did this consensus contribute to the current recession?
    3. What is meant by systemic risk? How does this influence the usefulness of ‘micro’ financial models?
    4. What particular market failures were responsible for the credit crunch?
    5. What is meant by ‘rational behaviour’? Is it reasonable to assume that people are rational?
    6. Is macroeconomics too theoretical or too mathematical (or both)? If you think it is, how can macroeconomics be reformed to improve its explanatory and predictive power?
    7. Does a ‘really good economist’ need to have a good grounding in a range of social sciences and in economic history?

    This podcast is from the Library of Economics and Liberty’s EconTalk site. In it, Scott Sumner of Bentley University discusses with host Russ Roberts the role of monetary policy in the USA since 2007 and whether or not it was as expansionary as many people think.

    In fact, Sumner argues that monetary policy was tight in late 2008 and that this precipitated the recession. He argues that the standard indicators of the tightness or ease of monetary policy, namely the rate of interest and the growth in the money supply, were misleading.

    Sumner on Monetary Policy EconTalk podcast (9/11/09)

    Questions

    1. Why is it important to look at the velocity of circulation of money when deciding the effect of interest rate changes or changes in the monetary base? Can the Fed’s failure to take velocity sufficiently into account be seen as a cause of the recession?
    2. Is there evidence of a liquidity trap operating in the USA in late 2008?
    3. How could the Fed have pursued a more expansionary policy, given that interest rates were eventually cut to virtually zero and the monetary base was expanded substantially?
    4. Why does Sumner argue that monetary policy should focus on influencing the growth in aggregate demand?
    5. How useful is the quantity equation, MV = PT (or MV = PY) in understanding the role and effectiveness of monetary policy?
    6. What is the Keynesian approach to monetary policy in a recession? How does this differ from the monetarist approach? Are both approaches focusing on the demand side and thus quite different from supply-side analysis of recession?
    7. Why is the consumer prices index (CPI) a poor indicator of a nominal shock to the economy? Should the central bank focus on nominal GDP, rather than CPI, as an indicator of the state of the economy and as a guide to the stance of monetary policy?
    8. What are the strengths and weaknesses of using a Taylor rule as a guide to monetary policy? Would nominal GDP futures be a better target for monetary policy?

    The Bank of England’s latest quarterly Inflation Report was published on November 11. With all the gloomy news over the past few months the report is pleasantly up-beat – certainly for the longer term. As Mervyn King, Governor of the Bank of England, states in his opening remarks to the publication of the report, “The considerable stimulus from the past easing of monetary and fiscal policy and the depreciation of sterling should lead to a recovery in economic activity.”

    Nevertheless, recovery will be slow, especially at first. This means that it will be some time before output returns to pre-recession levels. “Despite a recovery in economic growth, output is unlikely, at least for a considerable period, to return to a level consistent with a continuation of its pre-crisis trend. That is in large part because the impact of the downturn on the supply capacity of the economy is expected to persist. But it is also because there is likely to be sustained weakness of demand relative to that capacity.”

    There is surprisingly good news too on employment and unemployment. Although unemployment has risen sharply in recent months, the rate of increase is slowing and “There was a small increase of 6000 in the number of people in employment to 28.93 million, the first quarterly increase since May–July 2008 (see Labour market statistics, November 2009).

    So should we be putting out the flags? Can the Bank of England ease off on quantitative easing (see Easing up on quantitative easing)? Or does it still need to keep on increasing money supply, especially as fiscal policy will have to get a lot tighter? The following articles consider the issues.

    Mervyn King: economy remains ‘uncertain’ (video) Channel 4 News, Faisal Islam (11/11/09)
    Bank of England governor dampens hopes of swift UK recovery Guardian, Graeme Wearden (11/11/09)
    Recovery has only just started, warns sombre King Guardian, Heather Stewart (11/11/09)
    Cautious good cheer BBC News, Stephanomics (11/11/09)
    Bank of England’s Mervyn King says UK only just started on recovery road Telegraph (11/11/09)
    The Bank of England’s Inflation Report is useless. Here’s why. Telegraph, Edmund Conway (11/11/09)
    Bank of England raises growth and inflation forecasts: economists react (includes video) Telegraph (11/11/09)
    Bank of England talks up hopes of strong recovery Times Online, Robert Lindsay (11/11/09)
    Bank of England cautions on economic recovery BusinessWeek, Jane Wardell(11/11/09)
    Just who benefits from quantitative easing? WalesOnline (11/11/09)
    Inflation Report: Forget the fan charts, what we need is a clear economic policy Telegraph, Jeremy Warner (11/11/09)
    We’ve no choice but to keep inflating Independent, Hamish McRae (11/11/09)
    Is there a break in the economic gloom? (video) BBC Newsnight, Paul Mason (12/11/09)

    The Bank of England Inflation Report can be found at the following site, which contains links to the full report, the Governor’s opening remarks, charts, a podcast and a webcast:
    Inflation Report November 2009 Bank of England

    Questions

    1. Explain what the three fan charts, Charts 1, 2 and 3 on pages 6, 7 and 8 of the Inflation Report, show.
    2. Why is the Bank of England more optimistic than in its previous report (August 2009)?
    3. Why did the sterling exchange rate fall on the publication of the report?
    4. Has the policy of expansionary monetary policy proved to be beneficial and should the Bank of England continue to pursue an expansionary monetary policy?
    5. What determines the balance of effects of an expansionary monetary policy on (a) asset prices; (b) real output; and (c) inflation?
    6. How have relatively flexible labour markets affected the impact of recession on (a) wage rates; (b) unemployment?