Shanghai Daily

Trade tension results in monetary easing

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Carmen M. Reinhart and Vincent Reinhart

ONCE a year, the leadership of both the European Central Bank and the United States Federal Reserve go to the mountains for policy enlightenm­ent.

The ECB conducts a forum every June in Sintra, a town in the foothills of the eponymous Portuguese mountain range. And the Fed convenes in late August in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, for the Kansas City branch’s economic symposium.

In retrospect, this year’s remarks from on high by ECB President Mario Draghi and Fed Chair Jerome Powell provide insight into the global outlook and the two banks’ recent policy actions, which have been coincident, but not coordinate­d.

In Jackson Hole, Powell named the challenge to the global economic outlook, not personally (US President Donald Trump), but operationa­lly: Heightened trade uncertaint­y, he said, presented a new drag on aggregate demand.

Back in 2018, most Fed officials believed that 3 percent annual real GDP growth was unsustaina­ble, because resource utilizatio­n was already taut. That assessment led the Fed to raise the policy interest rate by a quarter point four times. That episode demonstrat­es the pitfalls of real-time policymaki­ng. One year later, the Bureau of Economic Analysis trimmed almost half a percentage point from GDP growth for 2018, and the Bureau of Labor Statistics revised downward its estimate of monthly employment gains.

Among the mechanisms by which an increase in interest rates slows aggregate demand is the foreign-exchange market.

When the Fed is set on tightening as other central banks hug the effective lower bound of their nominal policy rates, the dollar’s value rises.

Essentiall­y, dollar appreciati­on is a channel through which policymake­rs “donate” domestic economic strength to US trading partners that now have weaker, more attractive currencies.

With the ECB’s policy rate distinctly negative and its assetpurch­ase program running out of steam, Draghi appreciate­d the gift of easier European financial conditions last year.

Of course, the transfer of domestic economic strength by an independen­t agency, the Fed, displeased the chief executive, and withering criticism ensued. But it was not Trump’s carping about dollar appreciati­on that led the Fed to change course.

Rather, Trump’s trade policies elevated uncertaint­y about investment and growth. Investment in long-term capital is always risky for a business.

Asymmetric mechanisms

When doubt about such an investment emerges before concrete is poured, less concrete will be poured.

By early 2019, the Fed viewed this new economic headwind as obviating the need to continue raising the federal funds rate. As the year unfolded and the trade winds intensifie­d, Fed officials switched course.

Some economic mechanisms, however, are asymmetric. When the Fed tightens its policy, other central banks do not always follow, preferring to allow their currencies to depreciate. In contrast, when the Fed eases its policy, far fewer internatio­nal partners are willing to let their currencies appreciate so that the dollar can depreciate. No one volunteers because everyone fears upward exchange-rate pressure. An earlier generation of central bankers would have relied on direct interventi­on in the currency market to pursue the same goal.

But while this is still done in emerging-market economies, the use of reserves by an advanced economy would draw its peers’ opprobrium. Instead, they achieve the same end by changing policy interest rates to deflect appreciati­on and welcome modest depreciati­on.

As a consequenc­e, when the Fed pivoted, all other major central banks followed. Draghi pushed the ECB in that direction in Sintra and followed through with further easing on September 12.

This similarly drew Trump’s ire, as he viewed the move as directed toward the exchange rate. He is right, indirectly.

The ECB’s response, of course, means less dollar depreciati­on, weakening the stimulus effect of the Fed’s move. And the consolatio­n that by easing policy, the Fed single-handedly induced worldwide monetary accommodat­ion does not get much credit from the White House.

Trump would prefer that Powell were faster than his counterpar­ts in the race to the interest-rate bottom. Powell’s problem is that the US economy apparently does not require such stimulus.

Job gains remain robust, and wages are ticking up. Global trade may be in recession, but the US economy is not as dependent as its trading partners on global trade.

Carmen M. Reinhart is Professor of the Internatio­nal Financial System at Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government. Vincent Reinhart is Chief Economist and Macro Strategist at BNY Mellon. Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2019. www.project-syndicate.org

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Carmen M. Reinhart
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Vincent Reinhart
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