MIT Robert M. Solow Professor of Economics | Macro, International, Public, Monetary, Taxes, Finance | v = u + β v | Beatles | Boston | Argentina | Patagonia
Iván Werning is an Argentine economist who has served as the Robert M. Solow Professor of Economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology since 2014.
Reposted by Joshua Goodman
www.youtube.com/live/DoFrOjJ...
Optimal Currency Area literature (Mundell) studied when a common currency is not too costly for stabilization.
But if coordination is valuable, our mechanism says a common currency can be strict benefit!
So maybe the Euro was a good idea?... 🤔
Our results are not driven by traditional beggar-thy-neighbor (on output, not inflation as here) nor by terms-of-trade-effects (market power, our countries take global price as given).
In response to a negative supply shock (say, an oil shock), decentralized monetary policy is too loose.
Inflation is too high, output too high. Relative to the coordinated optimum.
Equilibrium must be on red line: world Phillips curve...
...yet countries think they can deviate along the flatter blue line...
...but all that does is raise the price Q and shift their curve! 😳
Each central bank thinks 💭 “The cost of lowering inflation is too damn high.”
An ideal world planner 💭 “No! Those global supply disruptions are relative!”
Higher output → higher global input demand → higher global input prices → higher global inflation 😭
No country internalizes this feedback.
1. Each country takes the world input price (that rises!) as given
2. But jointly, they are affecting it!
Result: Countries do not internalize that by tightening more, they could (collectively) lower the supply in the input. Ergo, they don't tighten enough!
6/N
We model a world with...
– Symmetric small open economies
– Wage & price rigidity (both key)
– A global input (e.g. oil) with world price
There is little doubt that the recent inflation had two features: it was global in nature (similar across countries), coincided with supply shocks (energy prices, shipping costs etc).
"by simultaneously all going in the same direction, they risk reinforcing each other’s policy impacts without taking that feedback loop into account. The highly globalized nature of today’s world economy amplifies the risk."
economics.mit.edu/sites/defaul...
Thanks for reading!
Link to paper: www.nber.org/system/files...
In the process justifying simple intuitions that serve as guiding lines. It's important to check and ground good intuitions!
That’s not what our model says.
A better rule: Don’t overreact, but don’t ignore either.
Bottom line...
Tariffs create inflation-output tradeoffs that monetary policy can’t ignore.
In our setup, tariffs raise prices and depreciate the currency.
This echoes recent empirical patterns during trade tensions.
(capital flight is surely another reason, but basic macro+trade can already explain it)
It makes some sense as a simple communication device or slogan, but our model says...
... optimal inflation typically exceeds the mechanical pass-through from tariffs.
Zero inflation now requires deeper recessions and wage deflation.
The optimal policy is still to accommodate—with some inflation.
1. Targeting zero inflation. That would require a sharp contraction in output—too costly.
Letting inflation run a bit helps cushion the blow.
2. "See through principle": hoping inflation rises, but minimally, via direct costs. 9/N
Here are some numerical examples run thro the model...
-an extra "cost push" epsilon term in the Phillips curve, so it is pushes the curve out.
- the welfare objective is unchanged: dual mandate penalizing inflation and output deviations.
7/N
Inflation rises in the short run
Output stays above the distorted steady state
Gradual convergence to lower level follows
6/N
In fact, technically: the productivity loss is second-order, but profitability loss is first order.
Spoiler: it involves tolerating inflation—temporarily.
It involves softening the blow of tariffs on output and labor.
Intuitively ....
The central bank faces a tradeoff: control inflation or support output.
It can’t do both.
So what should monetary policy do?... 5/N