Is there a Fair Monetary Inflation Policy to mitigate negative effects of Price Deflation?

in economics •  8 years ago 

Libertarians and Austrian economists are often critical of inflationary monetary policies. Inflation is perceived as a redistribution of wealth from the masses to those who receive money from nothing. When it comes to economics perception often matters more than reality because all value is perceived value. Whether the libertarians and Austrians want to admit it or not, the mainstream economists also have some very solid arguments in favor of monetary inflation.

Life is usually not as black and white as those on either side of this debate would like us to think. Today I would like to present a new monetary policy that I believe is superior to deflationary solutions such as Gold or Bitcoin as well as the inflationary solutions such as the Federal Reserve System, debt-based money, or unchecked government money printing.

Please suspend any preconceived notions you might have about inflation and/or deflation. Our own cognitive biases can hinder our ability to see things in a new way. What I am about to present should be philosophically consistent and acceptable to most.

Fixed Money Supply

An economy built around a fixed money supply is advocated on the basis of property rights and the principle that no one should get something for nothing. Prices will naturally fall as the supply of goods and services on the market increases relative to the supply of money.

A fixed money supply may not have any monetary inflation or deflation, but it will still experience price inflation or deflation as the economy contracts or grows. Falling prices is desirable from the perspective of everyone but those in debt or those who hold inventory of unsold products.

The natural rate of inflation or deflation in an economy with a fixed supply currency acts as an implicit (and invisible) interest rate (positive or negative) on all economic activities. There are two sides on every interest rate: savers and consumers. The savers prefer high interest rates, while the consumers want low (or negative) interest rates.

A fixed money supply will implicitly set the interest rate to balance the supply and demand of savings vs consumption in the economy. Any attempt to artificially manipulate the interest rate will result in either:

  1. Over consumption at the expense of future production and standard of living
  2. Under consumption at the expense of present standard of living

Problems with Price Deflation

There are several very real problems with falling prices. Anyone in possession of goods and services earns less nominal income over time. People have a hard time perceiving that earning $0.90 today is better than earning $1.00 last year even if $0.90 buys more today than $1.00 did last year. Any attempt to cut wages is perceived as a loss. A lack of a pay raise is perceived as an insult and a lack of progress.

The same psychology that makes people perceive they are losing ground on their personal income will cause investors to perceive their company as failing due to declining nominal revenues.

It does not matter if everyone ends up with the exact same percentage of the economic pie, people will still feel like they have less and are losing ground. Since all value is perceived value, you could say that people would value seeing their income double in nominal terms even if their purchasing power declined slightly more than seeing their nominal income halve and their purchasing power increase slightly. Ironically this perception bias defines economic reality more than mathematical equations.

Neutral Inflation Policy

A trivial alternative to a fixed supply currency is to pay everyone a fixed interest rate on all money. This is economically equivalent to a gradual stock split. This interest rate would effectively replace the invisible / implicit interest rate with a new visible / explicit interest rate. Rather than the money under your mattress gaining purchasing power, it would grow in quantity by an equal percentage.

The exact interest rate does not matter, because regardless of where it is set there will still be an invisible / implicit interest rate (positive or negative) added to it by market forces. The only thing that will change is people’s perception.

All of a sudden people can quantitatively measure their rate of return on saving. It would make no sense to lend money to anyone at less than this interest rate. This in turn would place a minimum expected rate of return for all speculative investments. The economy in general will concentrate its limited resources into businesses that have the potential to do better than the natural interest rate after discounting for risk!

Now that the opportunity cost of consumption is made visible and explicit businesses will be less likely to invest today's limited resources in suboptimal businesses.

Pensions

Pension funds all operate under an expected rate of return compounded over decades. Individuals put money in pension funds today so that they can take money out in the future. Regardless of how you manipulate the accounting, everything boils down to people voluntarily choosing not to consume today so that they can consume decades in the future.

It only makes sense to under consume today if you can consume at least an equal amount in the future. If there was an explicit interest rate, then there would be no need to fund pensions. Everyone would know exactly how much to save to generate a future income stream.

Importance of Maturity Length

The maturity mismatch in bonds creates a source of economic instability anytime the market’s demand for short term capital changes relative to long-term capital. Paying instantaneous interest on all cash would be like paying interest on bonds of 0 days maturity. At any time this cash could exit “savings” and flood the market resulting in rapid price changes and economic dislocations.

Many economic investments depend upon delaying consumption for years or decades before a true return on investment can be realized. If the implicit interest rate in the economy changes rapidly due to market forces (cash flowing out of savings pushing up prices) then it could make long term investments fail.

Monetary Annuity

An annuity is a fixed sum of money paid to someone each year, typically for the rest of their life. An annuity can be viewed as a savings account that only allows you to withdraw interest payments, never the principle. From a borrower's perspective, it means you can borrow the money forever so long as you can make interest payments.

A monetary policy could be structured such that interest (printed via inflation) is only paid on money paid into an annuity. Under this model the economic effect would be closer to a fixed currency supply while while making long-term investments explicit.

Yield Curve

At all times there is an implicit yield curve in the economy. A blockchain that distributes inflation along a yield curve from 1 month to 100 years with increasing interest rates for longer time horizons would make the implicit yield curve explicit and guide investors accordingly.

The free market would still create an invisible offset from the implicit curve and all other prices and markets would adjust accordingly. The goal of making the minimum yield curve visible and explicit to provide a baseline rate of monetary inflation that converts an increase in the purchasing power of money into an increase in the quantity of money without redistributing wealth.

Any bias in the explicit yield curve will result in a transfer of wealth from those on the lower end to those on the higher end. In other words, those who save for 10 years from now will profit over those who save for 1 year from now. It only makes sense to add an explicit bias in interest rates if that bias is almost certain to be less than the natural bias.

Minimum Interest Rates

Under this monetary policy it is better to error on the side of lower interest rates than setting interest rates too high. If explicit interest rates are too high then not only will their be price inflation, but investors will wrongly perceive the rate of return on savings to be higher than the rate of return on legitimate investment. In this case people will under consume today and face an opportunity cost of less than optimal increase in future consumption. Namely, they will still see a rate of return in the future, it will just be less than what it could have been.

Recommended Monetary Policy

Based on this analysis I believe that the ideal monetary policy would be a strictly controlled currency (using a blockchain) that inflated to pay a small amount of interest on term deposits of increasing length. I would aim for 5% return on infinite maturity deposits and a 1% return on 1 year deposits.

Under this model an economy growing between 1% and 5% per year should see relative price stability with a small bias toward price deflation on productive years and toward price inflation on less productive years. It would largely mitigate the negative impacts of price deflation during productive years.

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Maybe more important than the specific parameters are:

  1. Establishing clear rules up front so people know exactly what to expect.
  2. Eliminating discretionary power to change parameters once the game is in play, or without some high hurdle rate for forking.
  ·  8 years ago (edited)

I advocate for the following:

  • interest is a consensus variable which can be defended by everyone, not only delegates with proxy capability
  • impose strict window for lifetime interest from 2% to 10% the change of which require HF

Would love to see such mechanism in Steem and also transfer it to Golos. I already had an idea to incentivize long term commitment a bit more flexible depending on period of investment. Also IMHO capability for lifetime interest create a starting point for UBI which is awesome. I am going to put 1/5 of my SP to lifetime saving account if that option will be available.

Resteemed and tweeted

Nice post. Block chain is well suited for rules based monetary policy. I agree simple rules are better. I think high interest rates are better though because it diverts capital into the highest return projects and leads to an acceleration in growth.

Still I would not be surprised to see a blockchain rule based monetary policy implemented sometime in the next 50years. Hell, someone should pitch Zimbabwee on it today and they might get a nice test case.

Kudos to you for putting this out there for an open discussion. Lots of great minds that are working for the common good is a winning formula!

@kus-knee (The Old Dog)

...place a minimum expected rate of return for all speculative investments.

I'm wondering if it would also limit the maximum rate of return for speculative investments?

It wouldn't limit maximum rate of return because maximum rate of return is independent of monetary policy. Only progressive taxation can place an upper limit on rate of return.

AWESOME piece. Thanks for sharing. Upvoted and shared on Twitter✔ for my followers to read. Stephen

https://twitter.com/StephenPKendal/status/803689700376670208

StephenPKendal Stephen P Kendal tweeted @ 29 Nov 2016 - 19:58 UTC

Is there a Fair Monetary Inflation Policy to mitigate negative effects of Price Deflation? @Steemit

steemit.com/economics/@dan… / https://t.co/uNXhWq9iuM

Disclaimer: I am just a bot trying to be helpful.

Well written and definitely some ideas that will need to float around in my head for some time before they settle. I will say that initially it sounds like a good idea to me. This is one of those things I likely will only truly understand by living it.

Resteemed.

Interesting ideas and to see how this pans out.

I know @charlieshrem is busy with new things, but I have asked him to contact me. Perhaps some others can who know more about #Blockchain etc than me. I know #RealEstate and all related #Policy.

I think I am in a good position to help start Blockchaining Real Estate transactions and decentralizing all the relateds.

-- I believe this is a key to economics, it is always related and qualified people can contact me anytime.

Any system with interest will destroy itself after about 30 cycles of some sort.
$1.00 - 1% interest = $0.99 and $0.99 plus 1% interest = $0.9999 with a building error of 1%/0.01% interest error.
I'm all for a better system than used by much of the world today to increase quality and opportunity of life.
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Is there a Fair Monetary Inflation Policy to mitigate negative effects of Price Deflation

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I think 5% is a good absolute maximum (on extremely long term holding) to avoid devaluing a token / share / coin / etc. Anything over that, and markets will likely correct the imbalance because folks who lack strength to hold (for whatever reason it may be) would be willing to part more easily with their holdings (and savvy holders know it).

Short comment for long post: deflation is not a problem in the first place.

Upvoted and resteemed!!!!!

I think with more real world examples this becomes easier to understand. I can grasp concepts easier with case scenarios.

Bob buys a loaf of bread. Sally runs a grocery store who has 50 loaves of bread. Mike is Bob's boss, and Mike pays his employee Bob XYZ

As long as the story isn't a tongue twister with names.. more like a short story.. it could probably be easier to understand.

Would make a great fictionalized story of this in play. If the story works, then it might be adaptable in real life too.

Anyone willing to take Dan's ideas and turn it into an easy to read story so we could see how this could plausibly work?

Great, open-minded examination of this issue. Slow growth makes the most sense to me; it's far more sustainable than other economic projections, most of which are not very accurate. When my brain isn't fried, I'll come back to this post and probably learn more from reading it a second time!

We do not live in "one economy". Don't efficiencies cause artibitrage opportunities that mitigate the goverance mechanism?

A fixed policy with no central interest recipients would work well, IMO.
However, I think it would be better to simply have a specified quantity of the currency, with zero inflation, as long as it's endlessly divisible. As you noted, a crypto would work nicely.
As the population increases, the trend will be for the currency will increase in demand and value. Each person's wages would decrease, but their buying power would increase accordingly (on average). Furthermore, increased reward for saving would be built into the system by default, with no need for interest payments. Any interest payments would be incentive based according to mortgage companies or others competing for your currency. It would be true laissez faire.
People would become used to the increasing value of the currency over time and adjust accordingly, just like they have for thousands of years when it comes to gold or other natural monetary instruments.
As we see with cryptos today, as long as people are willing to accept them, they are viable. The idea that fiat is not a possible solution has been proven false, though it pains me to admit it. The problem is when there are central controllers who receive enormous amounts of wealth according to how they manage the currency. And, IMO, any amount of interest is arbitrary, so why not just let people learn to live with it and make the total supply static?

Excellent post. A monetary policy is very complex and needs to be flexible because people learn and adjust behaviors. Therefore the same policies can lead to different behaviors. You cannot repeat a policy from the past and expect the same results. It must be an ongoing adjustment process that will use the wisdom of the crowds.

<3 Captain Dan.

Your thoughts on the monetary system laid out here... Something incoming in the hard-fork proposal? :D

  ·  8 years ago Reveal Comment

No monetary policy simply means "fixed policy". The market can adapt to any "constant" if it is reasonable, what the economy cannot adapt to is unpredictable changes in monetary policy.

The market can adapt to anything.
The WAY IT DOES, however, is both unpredictable, and sometimes catastrophic to people.

Best to leave it alone...don't fuck with it.

I think the best is to have as many different types as possible. The aproblem in the world isn't that there are too many currency ideas competing it's that the fed reserve has a monopoly. So, Dan's idea might be best, who knows, it's best to run this experiment with a million other experiments and see which comes out on top because of market forces rather than armies forcing it's use.

I agree.
highly redundant, massively parallel, widely distributed...