Low FF rate and down shift of Labor Particpation

Maybe they are beginning to confirm my ‘suspicion’ the mainstream has the rate thing backwards? Not that I agree with all their reasons, of course!

Subject: For The Economist in Us – Low FF rate and down shift of Labor Particpation

A short and interesting piece can be found on the St Louis Fed web site (and attached). Good chart on the second page showing the Federal Funds Rate and the Employment-to-Population Ratio. Towards the end of the report there is an interesting point about the current near zero rate and how it lifted, it could have have people re-enter the work force because it would increase the return to saving(s). I guess the labor force drop-outs view they’re not “leaving much on the table” . -Peter
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It is titled “Low Interest Rates Have Yet to Spur Job Growth”.

The study says that “low interest rates , of late, do not seem to be having much of the intended effect either on spending or on job growth.”

A serious concern in labor market has been the down shift of the labor participation rate which may be hiding the true level of unemployment as people drop out of the labor force.

The paper states “”Interest rates represent the return we get for waiting to consume. Low interest rates encourage more spending today, which the Fed intends, and more leisure today, which the Fed does not intend. Labor participation rates decline for many reasons, but low interest rates work in the direction of discouraging labor market participation.”

Apparently, the Fed has been chasing its own tail and the more it has lowered rates in order to produce higher demand for labor, it has generated lower participation rates.

The paper concludes, with great understatement, “After four years of low interest rates and stagnating growth around the world, a better understanding of low interest rate policies is needed.”

Maybe Chair Bernanke agrees and this explains his announced absence from Jackson Hole.

Kocherlakota Says Low Fed Rates Create Financial Instability

Yet to find a single FOMC member who’s got it right, particularly with regard to QE:

Kocherlakota Says Low Fed Rates Create Financial Instability

By Joshua Zumbrun

April 18 (Bloomberg) — Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis President Narayana Kocherlakota said the central banks low interest-rate policies, though necessary, will probably generate signs of financial instability.

‘Probably’ used here means they haven’t yet. And if you look at Japan after 20 years of this it’s quite the opposite.

Unusually low real interest rates should be expected to be linked with inflated asset prices, high asset return volatility and heightened merger activity, Kocherlakota said today

Any evidence of this in Japan, US?

in the prepared text of a speech in New York. All of these financial market outcomes are often interpreted

Yes, and just as often wrong.

as signifying financial market instability. He told reporters later he doesnt see financial instability as imminent.

Right, so where’s he coming from?

Fed Governor Jeremy Stein and Kansas City Fed President Esther George are among those who have voiced concerns that an extended period of low interest rates is heightening the risk of asset bubbles in markets such as junk bonds and farmland.

Based on what? Has new issuance of junk bonds exploded in Japan? US? Anywhere due to low rates?

While George has dissented from this years Federal Open Market Committee decisions because of this risk, Kocherlakota is among the strongest supporters of additional monetary stimulus on the committee.

That hasn’t been working as hoped for/expected/feared.

In speeches earlier this month, Kocherlakota said he sees an ongoing modest recovery with unemployment staying at 7 percent or more through late 2014. The slow recovery calls for more accommodation, he said in a speech, repeating his call to postpone consideration of any increase in interest rates. He doesnt vote on policy this year.

Not a word about interest income channels, or any other attempt to explain why low rates haven’t ‘worked’ here or in Japan or anywhere else. The best they can do is the counter factual ‘it would have been worse otherwise based on our models’

Posted in Fed

Federal Reserve Board Governor Daniel Tarullo worried about wholesale funding…

Please let him know the liability side of banking is not the place for market discipline, thanks:

Fed’s Tarullo says focused on big bank reliance on wholesale funding

April 18 (Reuters) —
WASHINGTON – Federal Reserve Board Governor Daniel Tarullo said on Thursday that U.S. banks were in better shape now than prior to the financial crisis, but he remained worried by the vulnerability of the very big firms to reliance on fickle market liquidity.

“My concern in particular is the intersection of ‘too big to fail’ with very large institutions, with very large wholesale funding markets that are subject to runs, and eventually then to liquidity freezes,” he told Bloomberg Television in an interview.

Dudley still doing wrong

He still thinks bond buying is stepping on the gas pedal, when it’s actually the brake pedal.

Latest Jobs Report Gives Me Pause, Says Fed’s Dudley

April 16 (Reuters) — An influential Federal Reserve official said on Tuesday the weak March jobs report made him more cautious on how far the economy has come, and underscores the need for the U.S. central bank to keep buying bonds apace.

In a breakfast address, New York Fed President William Dudley said he expects “sluggish” economic growth of 2 to 2.5 percent this year and only a modest decline in unemployment. The labor market, he said, has not yet shown the substantial improvement the Fed seeks.

A paltry 88,000 new jobs were created last month, well below expectations, while the jobless rate fell by a tenth to 7.6 percent because droves of Americans gave up the search for work.

“While I don’t want to read too much into a single month’s data, this underscores the need to wait and see how the economy develops before declaring victory prematurely,” said Dudley, a permanent voting member of the Fed’s monetary policy committee and a close ally of Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke.

“I’d note that we saw similar slowdowns in job creation in 2011 and 2012 after pickups in the job creation rate and this, along with the large amount of fiscal restraint hitting the economy now, makes me more cautious,” he told the Staten Island Chamber of Commerce.

comments on a line from a confidential report from Karim

Comments and ramblings:

“Strong multiplier effects from construction jobs to broader economy.”

Good report!!!

I used to call this the ‘get a job, buy a car, get a job buy a house’ accelerator. And yes, it has happened in past business cycles and been a strong driver. But going back to the last Bush up leg, turns out it was supported to a reasonably large degree by the ‘subprime fraud’ dynamic of ‘make 30k/year, buy a 300k house’ with fraudulent appraisals and fraudulent income statements. And the Clinton up leg was supported by the funding of impossible .com business plans and y2k fear driven investment, and the Reagan years by the S&L up leg that resulted in 1T in bad loans, back when that was a lot of money. Japan, on the other hand, has carefully avoided, lets say, a credit boom based on something they would have regretted in hindsight, as was the case in the US.

The point is it takes a lot of deficit spending to overcome the demand leakages, and with the govt down to less than 6% of GDP this year, yes, ‘legit’ housing can add quite a bit, but can it add more than it did in Japan, for example? And, to the point of this report, will it be enough to move the Fed?

Also, looks to me like, at the macro level, credit is driven by/limited by income (real or imagined), and the proactive deficit reduction measures like the FICA hikes and the sequesters have directly removed income, as had QE and the rate cuts in general. So yes, debt is down as a % of income, but the level of income is being suppressed (call it income repression policy?) through pro active fiscal and the low number of people working and getting paid for it.

Domestic energy production adds another interesting dimension. It means dollar income is being earned by firms operating domestically that would have been earned by overseas agents. The question here is whether that adds to incomes that gets spent domestically. That is, did the dollars go to foreigners who spent it all on fighter jets, or did they just let them sit in financial assets vs the domestic oil company? Does it spend more of its dollar earnings domestically than the foreign agent did, or just build cash, etc? And either way its dollar friendly, which also means more non oil imports, particularly with portfolio managers ‘subsidizing’ exports from Japan with their currency shifting. That should be a ‘good thing’ for us, as it means taxes can be that much lower for a given size govt, but of course the politicians don’t have enough sense to do that. It all comes back to the question of whether the deficit is too small.

As for banking and lending, anecdotally , my direct experience with regulators is that they are ‘bad’ and vindictive people, much like many IRS agents I’ve come across, and right now they are engaging in what the Fed calls ‘regulatory over reach’, particularly at the small bank level, but also at the large bank level. This makes a bank supported credit boom highly problematic. And without bank support, the non bank sector is limited as well.

Lastly, there’s a difference between deficits coming down via automatic stabilizers and via proactive deficit reduction. The automatic stabilizers bring the deficit down when non govt credit growth is ‘already’ strong enough to bring it down, while proactive deficit reduction, aka ‘austerity’ does it ‘ahead of’ non govt credit growth, which means austerity can/does keep non govt credit growth from materializing (via income/savings reduction).

Conclusion- the Fed is correct in being concerned about our domestic dynamics. And they are right about being concerned about the rest of the global economy. Europe is still going backwards, as is China where they are cutting back on the growth of debt by local govts and state banks, all of which ‘counts’ as part of the deficit spending that drove prior levels of growth. And softer resource prices hit the resource exporters who growth is leveraged to the higher prices. I wrote a while back about what happens when the longer term commodity cycle peaks, supply tends to catch up and prices tend to fall back to marginal costs of production, etc.

And the Fed has to suspect, at least, the QE isn’t going to do anything for output and employment in Japan, any more than it’s actually done for the US.

My story of the Thatcher era

Here’s how I remember it all.
I didn’t look anything up, with the idea that memories matter.

The ‘golden age’ from WWII was said to have ended around 1973. Inflation and employment was remembered as relatively low, productivity high, the American middle class thriving.

Why? Keynes was sort of followed. The Kennedy tax cuts come to mind. But also of consequence and ignored was the fact that the US had excess crude production capacity, with the Texas Railroad Commission setting quotas, etc. to support prices at maybe the $2.50-$3.00 price range. And stable crude prices, though maybe a bit higher than they ‘needed’ to be, meant reasonable price stability, as much was priced on a cost plus basis, and the price of oil was a cost of most everything, directly or indirectly.

But in the early 1970’s demand for crude exceeded the US’s capacity to produce it, and Saudi Arabia became the swing producer, replacing the Texas Railroad commission as price setter. And, of course, price stability wasn’t their prime objective, as they hiked price first to about $10 by maybe 1975, which caused a near panic globally, then after a too brief pause they hiked to $20, and finally $40 by maybe 1980.

With oil part of the cost structure, the consumer price index, aka ‘inflation’, soared to double digits by the late 70’s. Headline Keynesian proposals were largely the likes of price and wage controls, which Nixon actually tried for a while. But it turned out the voters preferred inflation to their government telling them what they could earn (wage controls on organized labor and others) and what they could charge. Arthur Burns had the Fed funds rate up to maybe 6%. Miller took over and quickly fell out of favor, followed by tall Paul in maybe 1979 who put on what might be the largest display of gross ignorance of monetary operations with his borrowed reserve targeting policy. However, a year or so after the price of oil broke as did inflation giving tall Paul the spin of being the man who courageously broke inflation. Overlooked was that Jimmy Carter had allowed the deregulation of natural gas in 1978, triggering a massive increase in supply, with our electric utilities shifting from oil to nat gas, and OPEC desperately cutting production by maybe 15 million barrels/day in what turned out to be an unsuccessful effort to hold price above $30, as the supply shock was too large for them and they drowned in the flood of no longer needed oil, with prices falling to maybe the $10 range where they stayed for almost 20 years, until climbing demand again put the Saudis in the catbird seat. Meanwhile, Greenspan got credit for that goldilocks period that again was the product of stable oil prices, not the Fed (at least in my story.)

So back to the 70’s, and continuous oil price hikes by a foreign monopolist. All nations experienced pretty much the same inflation. And it all ended at about the same time as well when the price of crude fell. The ‘heroes’ were coincidental. In fact, my take is they actually made it worse than it needed to be, but it did ‘get better’ and they of course were in the right place at the right time to get credit for that.

So back to the 70’s. With the price of oil being hiked by a foreign monopolist, I see two choices. The first is to try to let there be a relative value shift (as the Fed tries to do today) and not let those price hikes spill into the rest of the price level, which means wages, for the most part. This is another name for a decline in real terms of trade. It would have meant the Saudis would get more real goods and services for the oil. The other choice is to let all other price adjust upward to keep relative value the same, and try to keep real terms of trade from deteriorating. Interestingly, I never heard this argument then and I still don’t hear it now. But that’s how it is none the less. And, ultimately, the answer fell somewhere in between. Some price adjustment and some real terms of trade deterioration. But it all got very ugly along the way.

It was decided the inflation was caused by unions trying to keep up or stay ahead of things for their members, for example. It was forgotten that the power of unions was a derivative of price power of their companies, and as companies lost pricing power to foreign competition, unions lost bargaining power just as fast. And somehow a recession and high unemployment/lost output was the medicine needed for a foreign monopolist to stop hiking prices??? And there was Ford’s ‘whip inflation now’ buttons for his inflation fighting proposal, and Carter with his hostage thing adding to the feeling of vulnerability. And the nat gas dereg of 1978, the thing that actually did break the inflation two years later, hardly got a notice, before or after, and to this day.

As today, the problem back then was no one of political consequence understood the monetary system, including the mainstream Keynesians who had been the intellectual leadership for a long time. The monetarists came into vogue for real only after the failure of the Keynesians, who never did recover, and to this day I’ve heard those still alive push for price and wage controls, fixed exchange rates, etc. etc. in the name of price stability.

So in this context the rise of Thatcher types, including Reagan, makes perfect sense. And even today, those critical of Thatcher type policies have yet to propose any kind of comprehensive proposals that make any sense to me. They now all agree we have a long term deficit problem, and so put forth proposals accordingly, etc. as they are all destroying our civilization with their abject ignorance of the monetary system. Or, for some unknown reason, they are just plain subversive.

Thatcher?
It was the blind leading the blind then and it’s the same now.
And that’s how I remember it/her.
And i care a whole lot more about what happens next than about what happened then.

:(

Karim: Payrolls/Tapering


Karim writes:

Truly a mixed bag report, but in a broader context, trend of improvement in labor market remains in place

  • 6mth average of payroll growth now 189k vs 198k
  • Payrolls up 88k, with net revisions of +61k (Feb now up 268k)
  • Unemployment rate down to 7.6%, due to large (-496k) drop in labor force; U6 measure fell 0.5% to new cycle low of 13.8% (high was 17.1%).
  • Large outlier in retail trade (-24k vs 6mth average of 30k) suggests some seasonal adjustment issues related to unusual timing of Easter in March may have had an effect
  • Average hourly earnings unchanged but aggregate hours firm again (0.3%)
  • Total advance in labor income of 0.4% solid after 0.9% gain the prior month and sufficient to keep stronger consumer spending trend intact

Some more Fed comments on tapering in past 24hrs-with Williams and Lockhart starting to mention specific dates

WILLIAMS
Assuming my economic forecast holds true, I expect we will meet the test for substantial improvement in the outlook for the labour market by this summer, John Williams, president of the San Francisco Fed, said in a speech. If that happens, we could start tapering our purchases then. If all goes as hoped, we could end the purchase program sometime late this year.

LOCKART
*LOCKHART SAYS FED COULD POSSIBLY ANNOUNCE AN END DATE TO QE3 -CNBC

*U.S. FED’S LOCKHART SAYS “WOULDN’T TOTALLY RULE OUT” TAPERING ASSET BUYING BY THIS SUMMER -CNBC

*LOCKHART SAYS `GENERALLY THE TONE IS UPBEAT’ IN HIS REGION *LOCKHART SAYS THERE COULD BE `UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCES’ OF QE *LOCKHART SAYS `I’D LOVE TO SEE 7 PERCENT’ ON JOBLESS *LOCKHART SAYS `CURTAIL’ GOOD WAY TO TALK OF QE OPTIONS *LOCKHART SAYS 3 OR 4 OPTIONS ON QE