As a general rule of thumb, whenever someone offers you something for nothing they aren’t telling you the full story – and that is exactly what we have with the Greens stating the Reserve Bank should start rebuilding Christchurch themselves by printing money.
Now, in order to come to this conclusion a bunch of points are being mashed together. So in order to understand what this entails, and why does it in this way isn’t the best way forward, we need to have a think about what such a policy really means by splitting it into “monetary” and “fiscal” policy.
Monetary policy, fiscal policy
Having the RBNZ buy up a bunch of government debt which has been taken on to rebuild Christchurch works through two channels we need to think about distinctly:
- Monetary policy – by “increasing the money stock” in this example, they are loosening monetary conditions.
- Fiscal policy – by getting the RBNZ to go and fund the rebuild by printing money, we are in essence transferring resources for the rebuild. They don’t appear from nowhere.
- We have betrayed RBNZ independence for virtually no reason … understandably a sneak tax by the RBNZ would make people less likely to believe them in the future about holding to their inflation mandate. As a result, we run into the time-consistency issue in monetary policy again, and it will become more painful for economy when the RBNZ tries to commit to its inflation mandate again.
- We have a relatively rough redistribution of resources due to this. By putting in our sneak tax through QE, we transfer resources to those with assets, those doing the rebuild, and those who can easily adjust prices/wages – while hurting those on fixed income, and those who have saved. It is an inflation tax – pure and simple – and as a result, it will initially transfer resources from those who can’t protect themselves (generally the poor) to those who can (generally the rich). If we introduce the tax through fiscal policy instead we can sort out these distributional issues a little better.
- A country that is willing to introduce QE as a clear fiscal transfer – when there is no monetary policy reason – will destroy its credibility with international lenders. People will scoff at this, but such a policy will increase the level of “inflation insurance” lenders ask for – increasing the cost of credit in New Zealand.
”No system of monetary policy is perfect and New Zealand cannot remain the last devotee to a failed monetary theory while the rest of the world moves on,” Norman said.Paint a complete and utter misrepresentation about the lessons from the Global Financial Crisis. Our flexible inflation targeting framework saved us from a massive crisis at home – while the rest of the world fell apart. We have learnt that there are issues of financial stability we should have looked at – issues we have discussed for a while – but this is definitely not a reason to start “fine tuning” the economy through the RBNZ. That is exactly what Labour, the Greens, and NZ First are trying to do … and its something that has been shown time and again as folly! We can easily make the case for the exchange rate having been persistently too high – the key word there is persistently – and the key point that comes out is that, as a result, our real exchange rate is too high. The high real exchange rate is not due to monetary policy – which is cyclical in nature – it is due to persistent structural factors. Things related to government policy and competition policy. The confusion stems from the fact that the combination of the current nominal exchange rate, inflation rate, and nominal interest rate are the indicators that move around with monetary policy. They do, and they tell us things about the stance of monetary policy – but the RBNZ only makes up one part of the determinant of these factors. The RBNZ works to achieve its inflation mandate while other institutions in the economy run around and do what they do. So what happens to the real exchange rate when we print money to do some building in Christchurch? Well if this activity persists it will likely go up as we are funding more government activity through an “inflation tax”. If it is indeed a one-off tax, then the outcome is more uncertain. Lets stop dwelling on the exchange rate like it is some shackle holding us back, and that we have a silver bullet to shoot it down. The macroeconomy is not, and never will be that simple. Instead lets us “why” NZ keeps running current account deficits and why our discount rates are so high – is it because we treat investments differently, is it because we have higher growth expectations, is it because government spending is too distortionary, is it because we have issues with competitiveness in the non-tradable sector, is it because we are naturally impatient people? The one thing we know, is that it is not because of monetary policy – that does not follow. Conclusion To summarise I’m saying:
- We don’t need QE in NZ, as we have enough monetary stimulus (and if not we can cut interest rates further).
- What is being suggested isn’t even QE – its the monetization of government debt, effectively a inflation tax to pay for the rebuild in Canterbury.
- It is unlikely that such a tax is the “best” way of raising the revenue to rebuild Christchurch – which should be the primary question.