Dan Kervick's picture

    The Political Path to Full Employment

    Paul Krugman argues in a recent New York Times column  that right-wing critics of Ben Bernanke and his colleagues are trying to bully the Fed into a misguided obsession with inflation, and that “the truth is that we’d be better off if the Fed paid less attention to inflation and more attention to unemployment. Indeed, a bit more inflation would be a good thing, not a bad thing.”

    Krugman is absolutely right to lament conservative pundits’ and politicians’ obsessions with inflation when tens of millions of Americans are languishing in unemployment, with all of the personal, social and economic misery and waste that unemployment entails.  But his argument, which assumes that the Fed can boost employment by engineering higher inflation, is problematic.  He defends the inflationist approach this way:

    “For one thing, large parts of the private sector continue to be crippled by the overhang of debt accumulated during the bubble years; this debt burden is arguably the main thing holding private spending back and perpetuating the slump. Modest inflation would, however, reduce that overhang — by eroding the real value of that debt — and help promote the private-sector recovery we need. Meanwhile, other parts of the private sector (like much of corporate America) are sitting on large hoards of cash; the prospect of moderate inflation would make letting the cash just sit there less attractive, acting as a spur to investment — again, helping to promote overall recovery.”

    I believe this is the wrong approach.  The Fed’s ability to boost employment is very limited, well-intentioned citations of the Fed’s full employment “mandate” notwithstanding.  Rather than looking to central bankers and the banking system to accomplish a task for which they are not really cut out, we should turn our attention back toward fiscal policy as the primary tool for bringing the country up to full employment and keeping it there.   And rather than seeking engineered inflation as the mechanism for boosting spending and employment, we should implement the MMT job guarantee proposal to achieve full employment and price stability at the same time.

    ... Read the rest at New Economic Perspectives

    Comments

    Agree. If inflation was the route to prosperity and high employment, Zimbabwe would be a job engine, and Germany, with low inflation, would not have low unemployment. Any gain by making debt inflate away, would be offset by ever rising prices.


    krugman looks like a chipmunk to me...  I think he is a nice little guy,,,  a chipmunk...

    So we got squirrels on our side,  and they got godzillas on their side...  

    They got worse than godzillas...  they got the vampires too!    This is supposed to be humorous... but not really.

     

    Geo


     

    Wow!  Never thought I'd see the day that...  well...  that folks would be so stoked to drink the cool-aid like you do!

     

    The subject of " Economics" is,  in the first place a complete bs story... I mean... not a science,  not a real thing either.    

     

    If you don't know what I meant by that: above...  maybe you won't get it.... you won't ever get it if you agree with the "economics proffessors,  and their phony psuedo....  thing.  I wouldn't even stoop to give them that it is any kind of "science"...  not that,  nor is it an authentic effort to understand things...  that are the constituents of what is our world/  and the way things are bought and sold.

     

    What might be a good answer to the problems...  would be an honest to god good man in the White house,  who really gave some what of a damn....  And with the new powers:  ( "executive powers"   such as the "unitary president" type powers...  well good luck if there is ever a president again... who would dare to use those new fangled "powers"  for some good.!!!!!

     


    I think Krugman's point is we're in the Japanese stagflation phase where the gov has to pay banks to take money, the days of gloom.

    A bit more heat in the economy would loosen up cash flow and tilt people towards investment. The current interbank lending rate is 0.12% to 0.17%. So on a million bucks, that's $1700. Why even bother getting out of bed?

    There is a psychology of spending when inflation is higher. I don't think he's proposing 10% inflation - we were only above 3% for 8 months last year and now we've dropped back below, and it does dampen overall expectations of economic growth and risk taking. The retail sector was the hardest hit for employment the last month as well.

    I don't pretend to understand this area well, but I think I get what he's expressing.


    There is a psychology of spending when inflation is higher.

    Yes, that's part of his argument.  But I linked to a paper in the post that argues the psychology might not be what he thinks it is.


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