Kenneth Rogoff is worried about how rising government debt will lead to higher interest rates:
No one yet has any real idea about when the global financial crisis will end, but one thing is certain: Government budget deficits are headed into the stratosphere. In the coming years, investors will need to be persuaded to hold mountains of new debt. Although governments may try to cram public debt down the throats of local savers (by using, for example, rising influence over banks to force them to hold a disproportionate quantity of government paper), they eventually will find themselves having to pay much higher interest rates as well. Within a couple of years, interest rates on long-term U.S. Treasury notes could easily rise 3 per cent to 4 per cent, with interest rates on other governments' paper rising as much, or more ... In research that Carmen Reinhart and I have done on the history of financial crises, we find that public debt typically doubles, even adjusting for inflation, in the three years following a crisis. Many nations, large and small, now are well on the way to meeting this projection.
As of March 5, the interest rate on 30-year Treasury notes was only 3.5%. Unless the market is unaware of this fiscal forecast, one would think that the market has priced in its view on these matters and apparently does not share Rogoff’s pessimism.
Mark Thoma is not so full of “gloom and doom”:
So I want to emphasize one more time that stabilization policy does not have to change the size of government in the long-run (and see pgl for a debunking of some of the claims about the size of government. i.e. he notess that "Federal spending as a share of GDP was about as high in 1985 as it is projected to be for 2019"). Fiscal policy can increase the size of government, but it can also shrink the size of government (lower taxes in the downturn, then cut spending when things are better to eliminate the deficit and government will shrink). So the criticism is not about the use of stabilization policy to help people during the downturn and to give the economy a boost, instead it's a claim about the long-term political aims of the administration with respect to the size of government. However, according to pgl's calculations, the projections are that the size won't exceed what we had under that well known socialist sympathizer Ronald Reagan.
While Mark was kind enough to mention this post, all I noted was the White House’s own projections of Federal spending, which do not indicate that President Obama has some big government agenda (as Greg Mankiw tried to suggest).
Rogoff is worried that Federal debt may double. It will certainly rise relative to GDP over the next few years. We have seen a doubling of the Federal debt to GDP ratio before. This chart shows the gross Federal debt to GDP ratio from 1792 to today and projected through the end of 2010. From 1913 to 1921, the ratio rose from less than 7.5% to more than 32.5% - but then fell to 16.3% by 1929. Then we had the Great Depression followed by World War II and this ratio skyrocketed to more than 120% by 1946. U.S. fiscal policy had a period of long-run fiscal responsibility, which lowered this ratio to less than 32% by 1981. Alas, we had an era of fiscal irresponsibility that saw this ratio to more than double by 1995. The Clinton era fortunately was a return to fiscal responsibility which allowed this ratio to decline to 57.34%. Alas, this was short-lived as the fiscal irresponsibility of George W. Bush tenure in office allowed this ratio to rise to almost 70%.
Our chart shows the interest rate on AAA long-term corporate bonds from January 1919 to February 2009. Interest rates did not skyrocket after World War I or World War II. One reason is that long-term fiscal policy turned to retiring the Federal debts generated by these two wars. It is true that the Reagan fiscal fiasco led to higher real interest rates – even as supply-side worshipers of St. Ronnie love to talk about what happened to nominal rates. Long-term interest rates have been relatively low in recent years even in the face of Bush43’s fiscal irresponsibility. I would suspect that if the Obama Administration delivers on its promise of long-term fiscal responsibility, we can avoid Rogoff’s pessimistic forecast.
Interesting post. Could you please point to a link or explain the "real" vs. "nominal" Reagan interest rates. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteWhy does a Keynesian stimulus require running up debt at all?
ReplyDeleteThe idea of government spending to offset a demand deficit is practically orthodoxy for most establishment economists (and liberal bloggers). And (in other contexts) they're perfectly cool in principle with a government that controlls a money supply based on fiat currency.
But nobody (aside from a few greenbacker or SocCred "money cranks") ever thinks outside the box regarding the assumption that the deficit has to be financed by selling government bonds. If the amount of the spending is calculated to fill the demand gap and employ idle factors, without being inflationary, why doesn't the government just spend it into existence *without* selling any bonds? Surely the mere fact that the government isn't paying debt to rentiers doesn't make it any more inflationary than it otherwise would be.
Likewise, how is it any less a violation of "free market" principles to authorize banks to lend money into existence, than it would be just to deposit the money into existence interest-free in people's checking accounts?
This post is extraordinarily shallow.
ReplyDeleteThe reason our l.t. interest rates have been low has everything to do with large non-economic buyers: China, oil exporters, and other emerging markets. This is well-understood by the markets and economists.
Unlike previous years, the growth in foreign exchange reserves of those countries has slowed, leaving them less to invest in Treasuries AND agencies (one must take them together as both are now de facto obligations of the government). More important, the $2.5tr in Treasury financing needed for this year DWARFS China's expected reserve growth of about $300b. In previous years, China's reserve growth has been about 70% or more of Treasury financing needs.
Why haven't markets reacted more strongly to the above news? There was a one time shift out of risk assets and into Treasury safe havens as the crisis accelerated. That does not happen over and over. This explains why long term Treasury rates have been steadily rising in the face of abysmal economic news.
What I am laying out here is ALL George Bush and the Fed's fault. However, just because I'm on Obama's side doesn't mean I'm going to blind myself to the potential risks of our unprecedented government intervention in the economy. Nor should you.
Why does a Keynesian stimulus require running up debt at all?
ReplyDeleteBecause the debt implies that the inflationary policy is temporary and will be followed, in fat, times with government surpluses paying down the debt. This is what came to be lamented in the U.K. in the 1950s as "stop-go."
The past thirty years have make it perfectly clear that the pay back promise is hollow. It won't happen because it can't happen. The next Clintonesque budget surplus will be followed by a Republican tax cutting landslide.
Reagan proved that deficits don't matter, according to Dick Cheney, so Rogoff is a double-heretic !
ReplyDeleteQuestion rather than a 'comment'.
ReplyDeleteWith respect to Kevin C's deficit financing comments: I think it could be a reasonable analogy to speculate on the impact of gold as an economic medium if governments could 'invent' gold reserves. What would be the short and longer term impacts on both its (golds) value and the psycholgy of suppliers, traders and consumers.