03/19/2010 The Taylor Rule: A Tool for Predicting Fed
Policy<http://www.caseyresearch.com/articles/3290/the-taylor-rule:-a-tool-for-predicting-fed-policy/>
By Bud Conrad, Editor*
*<http://www.caseyresearch.com/crpmkt/crpSolo.php?id=175&ppref=CSR175ED0310C>

On March 3, I heard John Taylor over lunch at the San Francisco Federal
Reserve. In his talk he reviewed the government’s bailouts and their effects
on our economy. If you aren’t familiar with Taylor, he co-authored, along
with Bob Hall, the macroeconomics textbook most widely used these days. In
addition, he served as undersecretary of the Treasury in the early Bush
years where, among other responsibilities, he was tasked with bringing a new
currency to Iraq.

But for us economics nerds, he is most famous for formulating the Taylor
Rule, a guideline for where the fed funds rate should be set. While there is
more to it, the general idea is to use the inflation rate and the gap in GDP
growth from its potential growth rate. To make sure that inflation doesn’t
get out of control, the fed funds rate should be higher with higher
inflation. When the economy is doing poorly, a lower fed funds rate can help
the economy.

The Taylor Rule incorporates these two items into the calculation to suggest
an appropriate level for the Fed to use in setting its overnight rate. The
basic rule is that the appropriate rate for the Fed can be calculated as
follows:

Rate = 1.5 X inflation % + 0.5 X (real GDP gap %) + 1%

In the chart just below, I calculated what the Taylor Rule indicated would
be a reasonable level for the fed funds rate (in orange), overlaid with the
*actual* fed funds rate (in red). It shows how the Fed kept rates too low in
2004, fueling the housing bubble. That was Taylor’s major point and is
documented in his latest book.

A similar comment could be made about 1975-1977. The wild swing down at the
end of 2008, with negative inflation and GDP growth, indicated that the
economy was so bad that the rate should go below zero, an impossibility.
Even so, that provides some justification for the extreme actions of the Fed
in undertaking its quantitative easing.

Looking to the future, the more important concern for me is that the end of
the chart seems to indicate that the appropriate rate has already moved up
to 4%. That’s because the measure of inflation used here for personal
consumption expenditures has turned from negative to positive.

If you think inflation will be rising and the economy will not be as bad
going forward, you might expect rates to head higher soon. Of course, the
Taylor Rule for rates and the actual rates don’t follow an exact track, but
using data from the last quarter of 2009, we see a dramatic turnaround in
the pressures on rates, based on the Taylor Rule.

Taylor was surprisingly critical of the long lists of bailout programs,
citing data that they had very little positive effect on other measures of
the economy. He implied we would have done better with less of these
measures, including the granddaddy of the Fed’s actions, to buy $1.25
trillion mortgage-backed securities (MBS), as mortgage rates dropped only
slightly. He said we shouldn’t worry about deflation, as he considers it
unlikely but felt that in the future we will be worrying about inflation.

In combination, the conclusions I came away with were supportive of our
position that the country’s economic problems are not over, and that
inflation will be added to the list of those problems in the future.

-- 
Best Regards,
Jay Shah, FRM

"Expect The Unexpected"
Blog: http://fuzylogix.blogspot.com/

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