Michele Bachmann and
Ron Paul want Congress to be able to challenge - and thus influence - Federal
Reserve policy. This would be a disaster. Fed Chairs have to deal with the
complex reality of a modern economy; members of congress, by contrast, need to
worry only about whether their ideology aligns with most voters in their
district. For this reason it is easier to trust - even if harder to understand
- a Fed Chair than a Congressperson.
It's possible that members
of congress have incredibly simple models of economic reality; it's also
possible that they just think their constituents have such simple mental
models. In either case, they seem to focus on the simplicity of principles
rather than the complexity of reality, focused on ideology while relegating
reality to their peripheral vision.
20th century politics
in the West is pretty simple to understand. At the one extreme are communists
who don't trust traditional capital markets and at the other extreme are robber
barons who don’t trust any regulations on markets. Few in the West believe in
such extremes now, but everyone leans one way or another. One question that
determines whether you become a conservative or liberal is, How much - if at
all - do you think governments should intervene in capital markets to do what
is best for labor markets?
Which brings us to
Keynes. He did not take a stand along this spectrum between extremes. Instead,
he said that the right policy depends on economic conditions. Fed Chairs - our
central bankers - have generally continued in his tradition; by contrast, members
of congress seem convinced that it's more important to avoid nuance and take a
stand instead, proving that you have principles by never changing your stated
reliance on either markets or intervention.
Keynes' signature work
- the one that essentially invented macroeconomics - he titled General
Theory of Employment, Interest and Money. I'd suggest that the title could
have been General Equilibrium because a large part of his
theory rests on the notion that capital markets can reach equilibrium before
labor markets do. Simply put, investors might rationally choose to stop
investing in industrial capital and new businesses before everyone looking for
a job has one. What is optimal for capital markets may be sub-optimal for the
economy as a whole. His interest was not in the equilibrium of capital markets
but a more general equilibrium that included labor and capital markets.
Keynes generally
trusted capital markets (he got rich by starting his day in bed reading stock
reports and issuing trades before getting on with his day), but also knew that
their interests weren't perfectly coincident with labor markets. He argued that
capital markets can - for extended periods - reach an equilibrium that isn't
good for the economy. (The Great Depression that resulted in 25% unemployment
caused a lot of people to agree with him.) If investors don't see good
business prospects, they will hold off on investments. If they hold off on
investments, jobs won't be created. If jobs aren't created, consumers buy less.
If consumers buy less, investors won't see good business prospects. When that
happens, Keynes said, good policy would increase demand through fiscal policy
(some combination of additional spending and tax cuts) and monetary policy
(making money cheaper by lowering interest rates, thus encouraging borrowing
and spending). Fiscal policy is the job of Congress. Monetary policy is the job
of the Fed. (Oh, and when unemployment is low and inflation is high, Keynes
would suggest tax hikes, lowering spending, and / or tighter monetary policy,
reversing the policy needed for dealing with unemployment. Good policy depends.
Bigger or smaller government? Depends. Higher or lower taxes? Depends.)
Fed Chairs are pretty
consistently Keynesian, choosing to deal with inflation with tight monetary
policy (as Volker did in the late 70s and early 80s) and unemployment with
loose monetary policy (as Bernanke has done more recently). There are
differences of opinion about tweaking policy in between the extremes of 10%
unemployment and 18% inflation but no Fed Chair doubts that the answer is,
"It depends." In that sense, Fed Chairs are all Keynesians now.
Members of congress,
by contrast, seem to reject such nuance. While Yellen tries to focus on
economic realities, glossing over ideological differences, congress instead
focuses on ideology and glosses over the complexity of reality. And while there
are exceptions to this broad brush characterization within Congress, Michele
Bachmann and Ron Paul are not these exceptions.
As you listen to the
questions Congress asks Yellen (and in many cases they don't ask questions but
instead do little ideological advertisements before asking her to affirm their
beliefs), it is pretty simple to decode. Republicans ask about the impact of
Fed policy on capital markets and the threat of debt and inflation. Democrats
ask about the impact of Fed policy on labor markets and the threat of
unemployment. Republicans are never quite convinced that the Fed is doing
enough to reduce debt or fight inflation. They worry that policy will erode
returns to capital with inflation or low interest rates. Democrats are never
quite convinced that the Fed is doing enough to reduce unemployment or to make
money looser, thus lowering unemployment rates for the nation's poorest.
Janet Yellen,
fortunately, is drawing from a broad array of data, more interested in general
equilibrium. She's dealing with investors who can be spooked, people looking
for work who can be discouraged, and currency exchange traders who will
literally turn on a dime from buyers to sellers of the dollar. She has to
consider a number of variables when formulating policy. Yellen feels
responsible for moving towards a general equilibrium; Many members of Congress,
by contrast, appear responsible only for proving their ideology. (And that
might be the simplest reason their approval rating has only recently risen out
of the single-digits.)
Ideology makes
it easy to win elections but hard to formulate economic policy. To turn
Fed policy over to Congress would be like buying a car that only turned right
or left rather than one that could be steered in either direction depending on
the curve of the road ahead. And that kind of car is guaranteed to crash.
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