Modern Money — Asset and Liability continue…

Reserves

The deposits and currency created by the Federal Reserve are the reserves of the modern system. It would seem that if the Fed could control the amount of these reserves, it could thereby limit the ability of banks to lend, and thus control their ability to create deposits. By controlling reserves, the Fed could control the total quantity of money. As we saw earlier, real reserves did constrain banks. It has seemed plausible, and monetarists everywhere have believed, that modern, nominal reserves could provide a similar constraint. But central banks all around the world, including the Federal Reserve, have tried to exercise such control, most recently in the late 1970s and early 1980s, and, in virtually every case, their attempts have failed. Read the rest of this entry »

THE JOB GUARANTEE AND INFLATION Part 3

In the face of wage—price pressures, the Job Guarantee approach maintains inflation control by choking aggregate demand and inducing slack in the non- buffer stock sector. As the slack does not reveal itself as unemployment, the Job Guarantee may be referred to as a ‘loose’ full employment. This leads to the definition of a new concept, the NAIBER, which, in the buffer stock economy, replaces the NAIRU/MRU as an inflation control mechanism. The BER is the ratio of buffer stock employment to total employment.

As the BER rises, due to an increase in interest rates and/or a fiscal tightening, resources are transferred from the inflating non-buffer stock sector into the buffer stock sector at the fixed buffer stock wage. Read the rest of this entry »

THE JOB GUARANTEE AND INFLATION Part 1

In this section we focus on inflation control and show that the Job Guarantee, able to simultaneously generate full employment and price stability, is superior to the current NAIRU approach, which uses unemployment to maintain inflation control. Broadly, there are three options available to an economy that desires price stability. First, as in the NAIRU approach, it can use unemployment as a tool to suppress price pressures. Second, it can introduce a Job Guarantee and use movements in the Buffer Employment Ratio (BER) to control inflation. Third, it can introduce the Job Guarantee policy and augment it with an incomes policy. We do not consider this third option.

The Role of Unemployment in Inflation Control

The OECD experience of the 1990s shows that high and prolonged unemployment eventually results in low inflation (Mitchell, 1996). There are several observationally equivalent theoretical explanations for the inflationunemployment trade-off. Read the rest of this entry »

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