Tuesday, June 2, 2015

Lesson 4 Potential Output, the GDP Gap, and the Intelligence Gap

This post is really about inflation but I didn’t want to mention inflation in the title so as to not scare you. Actually it is really about inflation policy so let’s start there before we get into excruciating technical definitions, mathematical equations, and kimchi recipes.

Some of you are old enough to remember inflation. Inflation means the cost of cherished goods and services is rising. One day you went to Whole Foods for one small bag of groceries and it cost you $1,000. Today you go and that same bag of non-pesticidal fruits and nuts costs you $1,100. You would say, yikes Helen, those dirty scum-#$%^&*s at Whole Foods are ripping us off and making it impossible to send our genius Golden Retriever Bogey to Harvard. Or you might simply say that inflation was 10%.

Since the great recession in 2008 the inflation rate has been very low in the USA. While the inflation rate was generally rising between 2001 and 2008 it has been falling ever since. It did rise briefly to nearly 4% during 2011, but it reversed course and inflation has been falling ever since.

So there are great minds who basically say “Inflation who?” implying that inflation is like your brother-in-law after the divorce. You ain’t gonna have to see him again! Very smart economists who teach at wonderful places like San Diego State and Harvard would swear on a stack of Paul Krugman articles that the Fed can pump in money and the government can spend its way to oblivion and back – and still not awaken a comatose inflation dragon. I know. I am mixing metaphors. Or was that a simile?

I know you have been waiting patiently for some really boring definitions but I had to get you ready. If you are like a lot of my friends, you haven’t read an economics book since Prof Schaffer’s class in 1964. Potential Output and the GDP Gap exist for one and only one reason – to help us predict future inflation. The above suggests that inflation is hiding at the moment. But this blog is all about how and why inflation might awaken from its long slumber and possibly be in a very ugly mood.

Remember GDP? GDP is a nation’s output. It is measured fact. It is the size of that pile of goods and services that got produced this year. It could be really big this year because Zeus was happy or it might be small because Kim Kardashian forgot to go shopping. Either way, GDP is what got produced.

Potential GDP is part of a fairy tale or what economists like to proudly call a counterfactual. Potential GDP is what GDP could have been. It’s like your kid’s potential. Okay, so he can’t actually hit the broadside of a barn with a large pumpkin but you are pretty sure that if he practices a lot he will soon be starting on the mound for the Royals. Potential GDP is how much output would have been produced this year if the economy’s resources were fully utilized. It is possible that actual GDP could equal its potential in a given year – but honestly, when is the last time your kid started for the Royals?

The GDP Gap is the difference between Actual GDP and  Potential GDP. Most of the time, the current GDP is well below its potential because most of the time resources are not being fully utilized. Thus, most of the time the GDP GAP is negative.

The main productive resource that tends to lag is employment. Those dern workers just love to sit around and watch Oprah every day instead of going to work and producing huge mounds of widgets and zidgets. Or those dad-gummed firms love to fire workers who then sit around and watch Oprah. In either case, if there are unemployed workers looking for work, this excess shows up as a negative GDP gap.

Here is the point – an excess of workers seeking employment (or improved employment) and a corresponding negative GDP Gap represent a weak economy with weak spending It is one that grows slowly and one that is not capable of producing inflation. As a result the US Fed is more concerned about the weak economy than it is about rising inflation. That relative concern retards their movement to a more normal policy. It puts off the day when the Fed removes a lot of money and stimulus from the economy. When employment improves and the GDP GAP turns toward positive territory, then the Fed will turn its sights towards mediating inflation. The big question now is when will that day come? When will policy return to normal? The GDP Gap is heading towards positive so we know a policy change will come.

The intelligence gap has to do with the Fed’s reluctance to move to a saner policy. Why do I say saner? The economy is exhibiting a return to stronger economic growth. Inflation is not one of those things that require bugles and a formal announcement heralding its arrival.  I know that GDP turned sour in the first quarter of 2015 but everyone including your barber’s Doberman knows about the temporary factors like a massive dock strike and storms attributed to global warming caused economic problems in Q1 that will not be repeated in Q2.

Now we have economists giving the Fed even more ammunition to continue a risky policy. A recent report (Changing Labor Force Composition and the Natural Rate of Unemployment, by Daniel Asronson, Chicago Fed Letter, #338) explains that labor will not be fully employed until the unemployment rate reaches between 4.5% and 4.9%. That means we will have a negative GDP Gap until the unemployment rate reaches about 4.5%. That means the Fed has a numerical excuse to not worry about inflation and to not engage in a more conservative policy for quite a while.  Meanwhile the economy gains momentum and some measures of inflation (percentage change in the CPI less food and energy) are closing in on the 2% goal value. Once at the goal value notice that it won’t take long to exceed it. And then the Fed will be in a really difficult position. Do they really want to have to aim all their guns on inflation knowing that a major abrupt change in policy will greatly weaken spending in the economy.

A quicker return to a gradual approach that started yesterday is what was needed. Waiting until tomorrow promises going from the frying pan to the fire. 

2 comments:

  1. Dear LSD. I don’t see any econ stats either domestically or internationally indicating inflation is about to step up. US labor supply exceeds demand—high demand for labor ignites inflation embers—and energy cost increases are mitigated by surplus US oil (and OPEC) and NG reserves/output. No need to inflate expectations of inflation.

    Legarde/IMF wants Fed to delay raising rates . . . no surprise there since the E-zone is grappling with members’ debt and repayment doo-das that would cost more should the Fed raise rates. Obviously Legarde/IMF don’t want US rates to increase. Better to let them repay their selves with their own inflated funny munny.

    Better to know when to hold’m, fold’m, or stand pat. I think the US should pat itself on its back . . . do noth’n till you hear from labor and constrained oil/NG supplies.

    In the meantime, enjoy inflation-resistant JD and Boones Farm/Anne Green Springs.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Correct oh great Tuna...there is little handwriting on the wall when it comes to inflation. But inflation is and always has been a sneaky little devil. It is not there one moment and then it is there the next moment. And then when it arrives, like a bad guest, who doesn't leave until all the JD is drunk up. My advice is about getting ahead of the game. The best time to kill off the next bout of inflation is before you see it. If we wait until it is evident and hanging around, then the costs of getting rid of it rise, perhaps exponentially. Ugh. You do remember 1980 don't you?

      Delete