Artículo de Andy Haldane
"One strain of this virus is an old one. Cycles in money and bank credit are familiar from centuries past. And yet, for perhaps a generation, the symptoms of this old virus were left untreated. That neglect allowed the infection to spread from the financial system to the real economy, with near-fatal consequences for both.
In many ways, this was an odd disease to have contracted. The symptoms should have been all too obvious from history. The interplay of bank money and credit and the wider economy has been pivotal to the mandate of central banks for centuries. For at least a century, that was recognised in the design of public policy frameworks. The management of bank money and credit was a clear public policy prerequisite for maintaining broader macroeconomic and social stability.
Two developments – one academic, one policy-related – appear to have been responsible for this surprising memory loss. The first was the emergence of micro-founded dynamic stochastic general equilibrium (DGSE) models in economics. Because these models were built on real-business-cycle foundations, financial factors (asset prices, money and credit) played distinctly second fiddle, if they played a role at all.
The second was an accompaying neglect for aggregate money and credit conditions in the construction of public policy frameworks. Inflation targeting assumed primacy as a monetary policy framework, with little role for commercial banks' balance sheets as either an end or an intermediate objective. And regulation of financial firms was in many cases taken out of the hands of central banks and delegated to separate supervisory agencies with an institution-specific, non-monetary focus.
...
Second, it underlines the importance of reinstating money, credit and banking in the core curriculum, as well as refocusing on models of the interplay between economic and financial systems. These are areas that also fell out of fashion during the pre-crisis boom.
Third, the crisis showed that institutions really matter, be it commercial banks or central banks, when making sense of crises, their genesis and aftermath. They too were conveniently, but irresponsibly, airbrushed out of workhorse models. They now needed to be repainted back in."
Simon Wen-Lewis comenta
domingo, 30 de septiembre de 2012
Sobre la crisis en Francia
Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
"The whole economic structure of France is an anachronism in a Chinese world and a German currency union."
"The whole economic structure of France is an anachronism in a Chinese world and a German currency union."
viernes, 28 de septiembre de 2012
jueves, 27 de septiembre de 2012
miércoles, 26 de septiembre de 2012
martes, 25 de septiembre de 2012
lunes, 24 de septiembre de 2012
domingo, 23 de septiembre de 2012
Bernanke's little depression
David Beckworth sobre la columna de Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
"To be clear, the Market Monetarist's view is not that the Fed deliberately caused the Little Depression, but rather that the Fed failed to fully respond to a number of developments over the past four years that significantly raised the demand for money: the U.S. collapse in 2008-2009, the Eurozone Crisis of 2010-present, and the debt ceiling crisis of 2011. We don't see these events dramatically changing the productive capacity of the U.S. economy over this time, but we do see them increasing the demand for money and other safe assets because of the economic uncertainty they created. The Fed could have met this spike in demand for liquidity by better managing expectations about future nominal income. The Fed's failure to do so amounts to what we call a passive tightening."
"To be clear, the Market Monetarist's view is not that the Fed deliberately caused the Little Depression, but rather that the Fed failed to fully respond to a number of developments over the past four years that significantly raised the demand for money: the U.S. collapse in 2008-2009, the Eurozone Crisis of 2010-present, and the debt ceiling crisis of 2011. We don't see these events dramatically changing the productive capacity of the U.S. economy over this time, but we do see them increasing the demand for money and other safe assets because of the economic uncertainty they created. The Fed could have met this spike in demand for liquidity by better managing expectations about future nominal income. The Fed's failure to do so amounts to what we call a passive tightening."
sábado, 22 de septiembre de 2012
miércoles, 19 de septiembre de 2012
martes, 18 de septiembre de 2012
lunes, 17 de septiembre de 2012
Keynes sobre la banca
Aca
"[The banks] stand between the real borrower and the real lender. They have given their guarantee to the real lender; and this guarantee is only good if the money value of the asset belonging to the real borrower is worth the money which has been advanced on it."
"[The banks] stand between the real borrower and the real lender. They have given their guarantee to the real lender; and this guarantee is only good if the money value of the asset belonging to the real borrower is worth the money which has been advanced on it."
domingo, 16 de septiembre de 2012
jueves, 13 de septiembre de 2012
QE3
Felix Salmon describe la medida. Y aca
Anàlisis de Cullen Roche, Scott Sumner, otro de Sumner, otro, The Economist, otro de The Economist, otro, Paul Krugman, David Glasner, Cullen Roche, James Hamilton, Paul Krugman, comentario de Cullen Roche a Krugman, Bill Woolsey. Otra vez The Economist
Resumen
Yves Smith dice que los QEs no han bajado las tasas de prestamo
Seeking Alpha
George Selgin sobre la victoria de los 'market monetarists'. Scott Sumner comenta. Scott Sumner sobre las raìces de los 'market monetarists'.
Great Tips-pectations
Discurso de Charles Evans de la Fed de Chicago
A flaw in the QE expectational transmission mechanism?
INET
QE3 and the Fed's shaping of global monetary policy
Reacciones de Scott Sumner, David Andolfatto y David Glasner a James Bullard
The Economist sobre el nuevo consenso dentro de la Fed
Tim Duy y Brad DeLong vs John Taylor y Phil Gramm
Trickle-down central banking
Anàlisis de Cullen Roche, Scott Sumner, otro de Sumner, otro, The Economist, otro de The Economist, otro, Paul Krugman, David Glasner, Cullen Roche, James Hamilton, Paul Krugman, comentario de Cullen Roche a Krugman, Bill Woolsey. Otra vez The Economist
Resumen
Yves Smith dice que los QEs no han bajado las tasas de prestamo
Seeking Alpha
George Selgin sobre la victoria de los 'market monetarists'. Scott Sumner comenta. Scott Sumner sobre las raìces de los 'market monetarists'.
Great Tips-pectations
Discurso de Charles Evans de la Fed de Chicago
A flaw in the QE expectational transmission mechanism?
INET
QE3 and the Fed's shaping of global monetary policy
Reacciones de Scott Sumner, David Andolfatto y David Glasner a James Bullard
The Economist sobre el nuevo consenso dentro de la Fed
Tim Duy y Brad DeLong vs John Taylor y Phil Gramm
Trickle-down central banking
miércoles, 12 de septiembre de 2012
martes, 11 de septiembre de 2012
Is the Fed really causing the sustained drop in interest rates?
Aca
"...this story falls apart because it ignores the fact that the term structure of the natural interest rate--the interest rate driven by the fundamentals of the economy--is being compressed too. That is, given the weakened state of the economy the demand for credit is down, desired savings is up, and interest rates are falling as a result."
"To believe the Fed is directly responsible for the low interest rates, one must believe it is capable of pushing the yield on the 10-year treasury from just above 5% to about 1.5% over a 5-year period. That gives the Fed way too much credit. ...
One can say, however, the Fed has failed to sufficiently respond to the heightened money demand created by these shocks and therefore has failed to stabilize aggregate nominal spending. This failure to act has allowed an economic slump to materialize which in turn has temporarily pulled down the natural interest rate. So, indirectly the Fed has been harming savers, investors, and financial intermediaries, just not in the way most observers believe."
"...this story falls apart because it ignores the fact that the term structure of the natural interest rate--the interest rate driven by the fundamentals of the economy--is being compressed too. That is, given the weakened state of the economy the demand for credit is down, desired savings is up, and interest rates are falling as a result."
"To believe the Fed is directly responsible for the low interest rates, one must believe it is capable of pushing the yield on the 10-year treasury from just above 5% to about 1.5% over a 5-year period. That gives the Fed way too much credit. ...
One can say, however, the Fed has failed to sufficiently respond to the heightened money demand created by these shocks and therefore has failed to stabilize aggregate nominal spending. This failure to act has allowed an economic slump to materialize which in turn has temporarily pulled down the natural interest rate. So, indirectly the Fed has been harming savers, investors, and financial intermediaries, just not in the way most observers believe."
lunes, 10 de septiembre de 2012
domingo, 9 de septiembre de 2012
jueves, 6 de septiembre de 2012
miércoles, 5 de septiembre de 2012
martes, 4 de septiembre de 2012
La fàbula de las canicas y la maestra
Aca
Ahora creo que todos hemos aprendido la lección. Todos debemos vivir dentro de nuestras posibilidades en nuestra vida particular. Sin embargo, los que en una economía tienen el poder único y absoluto de crear el medio de intercambio de bienes y servicios, tienen la obligación de asegurar que siempre haya un suministro suficiente de canicas para que todos podamos jugar.
Y todos aprendieron la lección y todos supieron que en un sistema monetario fiduiciario el dinero no tiene valor intrínseco y que aquel que lo genera siempre puede y DEBE crear todos aquellos papelitos necesarios para garantizar que cualquier niño que haga su trabajo pueda salir de clase a jugar con su amigo Walter, y para que puedan dormir con sus familias después de haber hecho bien su trabajo.
Ahora creo que todos hemos aprendido la lección. Todos debemos vivir dentro de nuestras posibilidades en nuestra vida particular. Sin embargo, los que en una economía tienen el poder único y absoluto de crear el medio de intercambio de bienes y servicios, tienen la obligación de asegurar que siempre haya un suministro suficiente de canicas para que todos podamos jugar.
Y todos aprendieron la lección y todos supieron que en un sistema monetario fiduiciario el dinero no tiene valor intrínseco y que aquel que lo genera siempre puede y DEBE crear todos aquellos papelitos necesarios para garantizar que cualquier niño que haga su trabajo pueda salir de clase a jugar con su amigo Walter, y para que puedan dormir con sus familias después de haber hecho bien su trabajo.
lunes, 3 de septiembre de 2012
domingo, 2 de septiembre de 2012
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