Thursday, December 10, 2009, 2:19AM ET - U.S. Markets open in 7 hours and 11 minutes.

Jeremy Siegel, Ph.D. The Future for Investors

Jeremy Siegel, Ph.D., The Future for Investors

Bernanke Correct to Target Inflation

by Jeremy Siegel, Ph.D.

Excellent (114 Ratings)
4.131578/5
Posted on Thursday, February 1, 2007, 12:00AM

Ben Bernanke, Chairman of the Federal Reserve, will go before Congress next week to testify and respond to lawmakers’ questions on the state of monetary policy.  Since his appointment early last year, Bernanke has gone through two such appearances and has passed both with flying colors.  But this year promises to be different.  Barney Frank, the new Democratic Chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, has indicated that he intends to challenge Bernanke’s goal of elevating “price stability” to the forefront of the central bank’s priorities, claiming that the Fed Chairman is effectively demoting the mandated goal of “full employment.”

But this is not the case. Bernanke is doing the right thing by highlighting the importance of inflation targeting. If Barney Frank really wants to keep the economy healthy and the jobless rate low, there are good reasons why he must back away from this confrontation.

The Mandated Goals of the Fed

The current Congressional mandate to the Federal Reserve goes back nearly three decades.  In response to soaring inflation of the 1970s, the U.S. Congress passed the Full Employment and Balanced Growth Act in 1978, which required the Fed to pursue policies that promote “full employment, low long-term interest rates, and reasonable price stability.”  Since low long-term interest rates would not be possible without low inflation, this Act was interpreted as requiring the Fed to pursue the dual mandate of full employment and low inflation.

Because of a growing body of theoretical and empirical studies, economists concluded that monetary stimulus can influence employment only temporarily, but has a far more permanent impact on inflation. Targeting a high level of employment may instead bring about a higher and accelerating rate of inflation.

Inflationary Expectations

The works of Nobel Laureates Milton Friedman and Edmund Phelps showed that inflation, once started, soon generates “inflationary expectations.”  These expectations accelerate the inflationary process.  This is because inflationary expectations become incorporated into the price setting behavior of firms, labor and rental contracts, and interest rates.  Inflationary expectations can also depress the dollar on the international markets, raising the cost of all imported goods, including oil.

Once inflationary expectations take root, inflation becomes far more difficult to eradicate. To do so, the central bank must raise interest rates sharply, as they did in the early 1980s, which in turn precipitated a recession.  The end result is an unemployment rate higher than it would have been if inflation were stamped out early.

This view of how the economy works is accepted by virtually all central banks around the globe.  It was for these reasons that the world’s major central banks, such as the Bank of England, the Bank of Japan, and the European Central Bank rewrote their charters in recent years to elevate price stability as their number one goal.  They did this not because they believed that conquering inflation was more important than maintaining a strong economy, but because they knew that trying to target employment would reduce the inflation-fighting credentials of the central bank and increase inflationary expectations.

Elevating Price Stability

The Fed has not yet followed the lead of these other countries. Nearly a decade ago, Republican Jim Saxton from New Jersey introduced legislation, called the Price Stability Act, designed to put the Fed on the same footing as other central banks by elevating inflation as the primary target of Fed policymakers.

Although many at the Federal Reserve supported this legislation, Alan Greenspan, ironically, did not.  Greenspan stated that he could live with the “dual mandate” of high employment and stable prices since in order to achieve maximum employment it was first necessary to achieve price stability. He believed that the second mandate of full employment was actually predicated on achieving the first mandate of price stability. 

This was indeed a clever interpretation of the law. Alan Greenspan’s reputation as an inflation fighter was strong enough that he didn’t need targets to back his anti-inflationary credentials.  Bond traders around the world trusted that Greenspan would keep inflation low.

But individuals of Greenspan’s stature do not always lead the Fed.  By specifying a target range for inflation, Bernanke is trying to elevate the goals of the institution above those of any individual by establishing principles that represent the best practice in central banking. In January 2000, Bernanke and Frederic Mishkin, a professor at Columbia University who was subsequently named to Board of Governors, published an op-ed column in The Wall Street Journal stating that setting an inflation target would “depersonalize and institutionalize the Greenspan approach,” and increase the anti-inflation credentials of the Federal Reserve.

Conclusion

Bernanke’s position is correct. Maintaining anti-inflationary credentials is the most important aspect of central banking. By stating that it is the Federal Reserve’s intention to keep inflation low and within a specified range, Bernanke hopes to bring the Fed’s goals in line with those of other central banks and increase confidence in the Federal Reserve. Bernanke’s goals, if he is allowed to pursue them, will best achieve the very goals of full employment that Barney Franks and most other Americans believe is so important.

 

Rate This story

Excellent (114 Ratings)
4/5
Sign-in to rate!

10 Comments

Showing comments 6-10 of 10<< Previous
Sort: first to last
  • spinaltap58 - Monday, February 5, 2007, 4:01PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    It's not Uncle Bens Job to make mortgage Brokers or Stock Brokers happy. It is not his job to make friends. He deserves a lot of credit just by taking the job after Greenspan left him with a mess.When Greenspan was the fed chairman, he was nothing but a puppet for Bush. Bush ran the show , And so the rates fell to Historic lows, including Mortgage rates. People who had no business Purchasing high end homes were able to get financing .But now the bottom has dropped out and foreclosures are everywhere. Inflation has skyrocketed and oil went through the roof. Home equity loans were taken just to bet on the stock market. Consumer debt is the highest it has been in decades and personal savings , the lowest since the Great Depression. Has Old Greenie led us into a quagmire we wil be unable to retcover from? Uncle Ben has to raise rates again to send a lifeline to end the rampaging inflation which has a stranglehold on our personal finances.Hats off to Uncle Ben!

  • John M - Monday, February 5, 2007, 3:23PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 3/5

    The previous comments are spot on. I find it amusing that you actually see some Wall Street strategists and economists suggesting that the Fed will cut rates later this year. Cut rates? Why? Because there's no liquidity?? The 10 year is under 5% and they think the Fed will cuts rates? The Fed no longer controls the long end of the yield curve and has a modest grip on the short term. You can thank balance of payment issues, recycling of petro dollars and Greenspans policies which basically flooded the economy with cash.

  • George - Monday, February 5, 2007, 12:52PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    I agree that Alan G is not as saintly as the financial press makes him out to be. By manipulating the data the US Government is under-reporting inflation and subsequently over-reporting GDP. Just ask an American ex-pat in Europe whether his/her greenbacks are buying what they used to. The US Equities market are up in dollar terms, but flat in Euro terms.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Monday, February 5, 2007, 11:05AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 2/5

    I completely agree with the previous comment. Saying that Alan Greenspan was fighting inflation is completely disingenuous. Under his supervision, the Bureau of Labor Statistics has implemented the worst possible techniques to artificially lower the government reported inflation. They also stopped reporting the amount of M3 supply. The article written by Jeremy Siegel appears somewhat accurate on other points, but like many other article it gives undue credit to Mr. Greenspan. My personal believe is that the most recent polices of Federal reserve (such as lowering rates to 1%) has resulted in unjustified and perhaps very dangers increase in liquidity. Because of reckless policies of Federal reserve , one day there will be a crisis in derivative market, which may bring down the financial market to its knees.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Monday, February 5, 2007, 5:21AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 4/5

    Good article, but did Greenspan fight inflation? He lowered the interest rate to 1% and left it there for a year. Home prices doubled, energy and gas prices doubled, and still they tell you that inflation has been around 2%. The purpose of fighting inflation is to preserve the purchasing power of people's savings. Try telling a person who prudently decided five years ago to save money to buy a house instead of indebting himself that there has been no significant inflation. Greenspan has rewarded spenders and punished savers.

Showing comments 6-10 of 10<< Previous
The columns, articles, message board posts and any other features provided on Yahoo! Finance are provided for personal finance and investment information and are not to be construed as investment advice. Under no circumstances does the information in this content represent a recommendation to buy, sell or hold any security. The views and opinions expressed in an article or column are the author's own and not necessarily those of Yahoo! and there is no implied endorsement by Yahoo! of any advice or trading strategy.

More From Jeremy Siegel

What's happening in the economy? And how will that impact your portfolio?

Find out what Wharton Professor Jeremy Siegel says.

Have his timely newsletter sent by email each week and be the first to learn what's moving the markets and why.

Subscribe now at www.JeremySiegel.com

More from Yahoo! Sources

  • CNN Money
  • Consumer Reports
  • Kiplinger
  • The Motley Fool
  • Business Week
  • Wall Street Journal

Sponsored Links

Live Forex Practice Account
Practice Forex Trading in Real Market Conditions with a Free Trial.
www.GFTforex.com
Refinance Now at 4.25% Fixed
No hidden fees-4.4% APR! No obligation. Get 4 free quotes. No SSN req.
MortgageRefinance.LendGo.com
Buy Stocks - $4 Fee at ShareBuilder
No account or investment minimums. No inactivity fees. Start today.
www.sharebuilder.com
Obama Urges Homeowners to Refinance
($90,000 Refinance $489/mo) See Rates - No Credit Check Req.
www.LowerMyBills.com/Refinance
Earn From 1.90% to 2.20% Apply Online
With GE Capital Corporation. Not An Offer Of Securities For Sale.
www.geinterestplus.com
Save up to 40% on Auto Insurance
Fill Out 1 Easy Form and Get 5 Competitive Quotes Today!
www.NetQuote.com

Historical chart data and daily updates provided by Commodity Systems, Inc. (CSI). International historical chart data and daily updates provided by Morningstar, Inc. Fundamental company data provided by Capital IQ. Quotes and other information supplied by independent providers identified on the Yahoo! Finance partner page. Quotes are updated automatically, but will be turned off after 25 minutes of inactivity. Quotes are delayed at least 15 minutes. Real-Time continuous streaming quotes are available through our premium service. You may turn streaming quotes on or off. All information provided "as is" for informational purposes only, not intended for trading purposes or advice. Neither Yahoo! nor any of independent providers is liable for any informational errors, incompleteness, or delays, or for any actions taken in reliance on information contained herein. By accessing the Yahoo! site, you agree not to redistribute the information found therein.

Yahoo! Answers is provided for informational purposes only, and no Q&A is intended for trading or investing purposes. Yahoo! shall not be responsible or liable for the accuracy, usefulness or availability of any Q&A information, and shall not be responsible or liable for any trading or investment decisions based on such information. View Complete Answers Disclaimer.