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Monetary Policy: Targets and Rules Price target Wicksell: adjust bank rate to “natural” rate of interest steady P Fisher: Reflate! Counter debt deflation Inflation target: Woodford…Bernanke…et.al. Taylor rule Money growth target: Milton Friedman and the Monetarists Nominal income target: n* = PY … P = n*/Y when Y deviates Koenig: offset real shocks as well as price shocks Optimally distributes risks between debtors and creditors Applied to Great Depression (citing Fisher, 1933 & Bernanke, 1994) Would have avoided “Mistake of 1937”
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Finance vs. Industry Conflict Finance – Industry Bankers – Industrialists Creditors – Lenders Tilt Toward Hard Money – Easy Money Financial centers champion price stability Key currency Global Reach – British return to gold at pre-war parity, 1925 – Fed defense of gold, 1931
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Epstein and Ferguson: Monetary Policy, Loan Liquidation and Industrial Conflict Explaining Fed behavior in critical year: 1932 Inaction – Open Market Operations - Reversal – Friedman and Schwartz Real bills doctrine: plenty of money for needs of trade Congressional pressure, then recess Epstein and Ferguson – Bank profits … regulatory capture – International constraints … villain gold – Pressures from industry – Liquidationist mindset … reduce wages!
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“…liquidate labor, liquidate stocks, liquidate the farmer, liquidate real estate. It will purge the rottenness out of the system…People will work harder, lead a more moral life.” Andrew Mellon Secretary of the Treasury, 1921 – 1932
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Epstein & Ferguson: Explaining Inaction Liquidationist mindset Purge the system! Curb government! Reduce wages! Gold standard constraints Open market operations reduce gold cover of currency
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Epstein & Ferguson: Explaining Open Market Ops Defense of gold bank failures BUY BONDS! … Prop up P B ! … buoy bank solvency! Political pressure: Congress … Irving Fisher Glass-Steagle Act of 1932: T-bonds can back currency Epstein & Ferguson: Explaining Reversal Loan liquidation by banks – Banks reduced loans/stocked up on short-term Treasuries Low interest rates Low bank profits Banks couldn’t reduce deposit rates, fearing withdrawals Uneven distribution of gold reserves between district banks Gold drain by France, then Britain pressure on some districts – Chicago Fed pushed for reversal: Chicago banks held lotsa T-bills…Chicago Fed short of gold
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1932 Monetary Policy Dilemma Reduce interest rate Foreign withdrawals Banks sell bonds to meet demands Bond fire sale … P B down Bank portfolio losses Bank runs Raise interest rate P B down Bank portfolio losses Bank runs Fed tilted toward tightness Set stage for final banking crisis Alternative explanation of final banking crisis (early 1933): Fear of FDR: Devaluation? Unbalanced budget?
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