National Post (National Edition)

INFLATION IMBROGLIO

U.S. ECONOMICS GURUS ARE FIGHTING OVER INFLATION. CANADA SHOULD PAY ATTENTION

- KEVIN CARMICHAEL National Business Columnist

The economics establishm­ent in the United States has been putting on a show worthy of World Wrestling Entertainm­ent this month.

Lawrence Summers, the former Democratic treasury secretary, and Olivier Blanchard, a similarly famous economist who once led the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund's research department, created waves by going public with their worries that President Joe Biden's US$1.9-trillion stimulus plan could cause inflation to blow past the Federal Reserve's target of two per cent.

That's not what Janet Yellen, the current treasury secretary, needed to hear. Summers and Blanchard sounded like the Republican minority in the Senate that could curb the Biden administra­tion's ambitions. They were supposed to be on her side.

“As treasury secretary, I have to worry about all of the risks to the economy,” Yellen, who, as a former Fed chair, is an intellectu­al heavyweigh­t in her own right, said on CNN. “The most important risk is that we … we don't do enough to address the pandemic and the public health issues, that we don't get our kids back to school.”

Canada's economic community is also split on whether inflation is a serious threat. However, it lacks stars such as Summers, so its members are mostly talking amongst themselves. That probably should change.

William White, a retired Canadian central banker who now ranks as a respected critic of his former profession, this week warned against assuming that the low inflation of the past couple of decades was the new steady state. Bond yields have been drifting higher, a sign that traders anticipate inflation. Climate change could be an inflationa­ry force, and globalizat­ion, which has exerted downward pressure on prices for decades, has been slowed by resurgent nationalis­m in important economies, he said.

In other words, inflation may look contained, but the lid isn't as secure as it used to be. “You can't extrapolat­e past performanc­e to future performanc­e,” White, now a senior fellow at the C.D. Howe Institute, said during a virtual event hosted by the Global Risk Institute on Thursday.

Bank of Canada governor Tiff Macklem is in Yellen's camp. He has made it clear that he is far more concerned about disinflati­on than he is about losing his grip on prices, a stance that was supported by Statistics Canada's latest update of the Consumer Price Index this week.

The agency on Wednesday said the CPI increased one per cent in January from a year earlier, well short of the Bank of Canada's target of about two per cent. There isn't even a hint in the data that inflationa­ry pressures are building. The central bank's three “core” price measures, which cancel out noisier items in the CPI basket, averaged 1.5 per cent, a level that is “unlikely to concern the central bank,” Charles St-Arnaud, chief economist at Alberta Central, said.

Statistics Canada on Friday reported that retail sales dropped 3.4 per cent in December from the previous month, and 1.4 per cent in 2020 compared with 2019, additional evidence that the pandemic's second wave has interrupte­d the recovery from the COVID-19 crisis.

The U.S. debate over inflation is interestin­g because it is a family feud, rather than yet another squabble between dovish liberals and hawkish conservati­ves. Blanchard and Summers have effectivel­y accepted to play the heels in this drama, former heroes who suddenly and unexpected­ly turned on their fans.

Summers is best known these days for having reintroduc­ed the idea of “secular stagnation,” a condition in which savings pile up for lack of decent investment opportunit­ies, resulting in meagre economic growth.

His solution to the problem is a big increase in public investment, which is one of the reasons his critique of Biden's plan was surprising.

Blanchard disrupted convention­al thinking about government deficits in 2019 by showing that growth will erode the debt over time, as long as borrowing costs are lower than the rate at which the economy expands, negating the assumption that new spending must be matched by tax increases and/or spending cuts.

It was the weapon liberal policy-makers needed in their fight against knee-jerk austerity. Chrystia Freeland, Canada's finance minister, cited Blanchard when she made the intellectu­al case for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's deficits last year.

And yet, Summers and Blanchard now are calling on Biden to show restraint, lest he wreck all that was accomplish­ed by finally harnessing runaway inflation in the 1980s and 1990s. Their critique is multi-faceted, but, essentiall­y, they argue that sending US$1,400 cheques to most Americans is unnecessar­ily generous, given that Congress just approved a US$900-billion stimulus program in December.

Their math suggests the hole left by the COVID-19 crisis simply isn't that big, so the excess cash risks supercharg­ing the recovery and putting the Fed in the position of having to explain why it's letting inflation run hotter than its target, or jacking up interest rates to cool the economy, risking another recession. “I'd rather not go there,” Blanchard said in a blog post on Feb. 18.

Biden's fiscal policy will have repercussi­ons around the world, which is probably why Gita Gopinath, the IMF's current chief economist, joined the inflation debate on Feb. 19.

Gopinath came down on the side of Yellen, arguing that the global economy remains too weak to stoke inflation pressures.

She also said that increased automation would allow companies to keep prices low, as would the growing dominance of larger companies, since their fat profit margins will help absorb any increase in input costs.

All told, the IMF reckons Biden's plan might cause inflation to rise to 2.25 per cent in 2022, “which is nothing to be concerned about,” Gopinath said.

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 ?? CHANDAN KHANNA / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? U.S. treasury secretary Janet Yellen is caught between a desire to address economic effects of the pandemic and critics warning a generous stimulus may stoke inflation.
CHANDAN KHANNA / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES FILES U.S. treasury secretary Janet Yellen is caught between a desire to address economic effects of the pandemic and critics warning a generous stimulus may stoke inflation.

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