Monetary Morphine and the Job Market
Pablo Paniagua
Ben Bernanke, the Fed Chairman, stated this week that
the Fed would leave the door open for further monetary easing for the years to come, in an
effort to support the job market and try to contain the unemployment rate. It
is also an extended endeavor to maintain the “full employment” objective established
in the Fed’s baffling dual mandate, along with the “prize stability” objective.
The relevant question at this point would be if further monetary easing will
help the job market in the long run or not.
A
key issue in understanding this problem is to recognize why the US has a high
unemployment rate in the first place. The recession might be the common answer.
Indeed, the recession has pushed companies all around the world to moderate
their employment base and cut costs, leading to a short-term shock in global
job markets. This distress led to a sharp increase in the unemployment rate
ever since 2007. However shocks are not always transitory; nor easy to revert,
especially given that the present one came from the biggest “leverage”
recession since the Great Depression. The negative upset in the job market
could be seen as a dual effect that needs to be analyzed with more accuracy.
The
first job market effect of a negative economic recession shock is mostly cyclical
and is a common element in all sorts of negative distresses and mild recessions
(especially those linked with massive debt restructuring and deleveraging, both
from companies and from consumers). This usually leads to a huge contraction in
investments and consumption. The process unfortunately leads to a cyclical
unemployment effect in the short run, naturally leading the economy to deal
with this contraction and deleveraging. In these kinds of cases however, the
economy experiences mild slumps or consumer led contractions.
Monetary
policy interventions can somewhat aid the macroeconomic situation by
stimulating the economy in the short term and creating a positive virtuous
circle for consumption and investment, which might lead to lowering the
unemployment rate. Note that this is only true and effective when the economy
has experienced a mild recession or contraction, not when the economy has
experienced a catastrophic credit crisis and an incredible misallocation of
factors of production in some sectors of the economy (such as housing or
construction).
Bernanke’s
speech this week makes us think that he believes we are in the former kind of mild
recession, rather than the latter; and more monetary easing can help the job
market. Giving the impression that he thinks this is a cyclical problem rather
than a huge structural misallocation of the American working class in some
sectors of the economy. These improperly allocated investments and factors of
production were due to a huge monetary increase led by the former Fed chairman
Mr. Allan Greenspan for more than 15 years.
It
would not be difficult to grasp the irony in the job market puzzle. But the Fed
thinks they can help the unemployed through more monetary stimulus and further
government intervention. In reality, the last couple of decades have
undisputedly shown that this sort of massive economic intervention causes huge
malinvestment and a dreadful job allocation in “bubble” sectors of the economy.
The fed believes further intervention is the solution, when in fact it has been
the problem in the first place.
All
the bad signals given by policy interventions to the investors and to workers,
will eventually transform to nothing more than in another economic crisis and
more structural unemployment, which will not respond to any further Monetary
Morphine.
The
second effect in the job market is strictly structural and it is more difficult
to deal with and to pinpoint by monetary policy than the previous one. Structural
problems in the job market reflect far deeper problems. Economists identify
some of these problems as: the existing mismatching between the skills that
workers have or developed and the ones that the market requires at a given time.
In other cases some workers stay so long out of work that they become
effectively unemployable, implicating that their skills erode over their time
while being unemployed. Economists call this process of permanently unemployment
“hysteresis”, which is a term to reflect the long-term unemployment experienced
in Europe in the early 80’s. Evidently the last crisis suggests that the US
might be experiencing a similar problem, which was catalyzed by the massive
intervention of the money supply that gave investors and workers the wrong signals
as to where to direct their economic decisions. This drew them in mass to
specific sectors of the economy, consequently leaving them consequently, trapped
with the skills they had developed, once the bubbles in those sectors
inevitably burst. It is relevant to address the fact of how discretionary
policies lead large parts of the population to make the wrong decisions in
regards to their careers or investments, which are only unfortunately revealed
once the misallocations are corrected by market forces. This leaves the current
unemployed workers trapped with skills that were sustained and demanded only through
monetary folly.
Undeniably
this huge monetary expansion and the possibility of even further intervention
is not going to improve the job market any further because, as we have seen the
problem was monetary intervention in the first place. This time it is unlikely that
monetary intervention will be the solution, especially since the problem is
rooted in the distorted structure of the economy. Even this large expansion of the quantity of
money (as shown in the Chart I) will bring more risks rather than improvements.
Once the massive quantity of fiat money is finally poured into the real
economy, it will create further distortions in the structure of production and
more malinvestment in the previous “bubble” sectors of the economy as well as
higher inflation in the long run.
As
we have experienced in the last 3 decades, lower interest rates and bloated
fiat money is the basic fundamental environment for asset bubbles and “boom and
bust” cycles. John Taylor wrote this week in the Wall Street Journal, “By
replacing large decentralized markets with centralize control by a few
government officials, the Fed is distorting incentives and interfering in the
price discovery with unintended consequences throughout the economy.” Mr.
Taylor is right, but not only will it interfere in the price discovery but also
in any further (if at all possible) possibility of cleaning the malinvestment
and purging unsustainable growth. Such a plan, dampens any further prospect of reestablishing
a natural balance in the job market.
In conclusion further
money printing could boost some assets prices. This is especially true in the
stock market, helping banks to clean their balance sheets and become more
willing to lend in the future. The risk here however, is that markets and asset
classes will become dependent and hook on more monetary stimulus like patients
became dependant on morphine, but the marginal effectiveness of the stimulus is
diminishing over time. This will lead the Fed towards a dead end game in money
easing. However this stimulus scheme will end, the job market restructuring
will be far enough away from the monetary policy reach.
Chart I. Monetary Stimulus by the Fed
Source: Federal
Reserve Board H.4.1.
I loved this one! Good work. I firmly believe the Fed Reserve is not being very brilliant through all these years on how they are stimulating economy by giving false signals. What I wonder is: they have pretty brilliant people. These policies have prooved to fail in different countries through different times. So, what is the Fed R doing by repeating the same steps again?!?!?!
ReplyDeleteThanks for your comment, I think there is a fundamental problem in the system of centralizing the control of producing money in a single monetary authority, natural commodity Money is way different from what the FED is actually pumping into the economy, this money being poured into the system is not desired nor wanted by the interaction of individuals, therefore brings unbalance and destabilize the spontaneous interaction being created in the free market.
ReplyDeleteEven if the Fed has the most intelligent people on earth, there is a positivist rationalist fallacy in believing that even thought we are smart, we can control or coordinate from a centralize authority the economic activities being performed by heterogeneous agents in a complex system. This is of course not true and most of the time every single centralize intervention just create unintended damage and noise in the natural reorganization of individuals.
My last article of the week, the first of June I speak a little more about monetary policy if you are interested in reading it, a future one will be about money.
Cheers!