talking about inflation and Fannie/Freddie bailouts in Sawbones post in BOTF and Revrick's post in Moneybox, has maybe furnished us with some debatable questions.
First inflation. I have copied the important parts of their arguments.
Run: The Arabs do not care what the Fed does as far as interest rates. If they do not like the dollar, they will just switch to the Euro as Iraq did pre-911 and as Iran was ready to do also. Print more money or cheap[en] the dollar and the price of oil goes up regardless.
In 1973, Fed Chairman Arthur Burns asked that oil, and eventually food (for other reasons than imports), be excluded from the CPI to not influence Fed policy. If the Fed did include both commodities in the CPI calculation fo policy decisions, should we be increasing interest rates to control the impact of oil and food upon it? One other president did just such in the late twenties and the result of that action helped lead to the worst recession ever experienced in this country . . . The Depression.
WE CAN NOT CONTROL OIL PRICING OR FOR THAT MATTER FOOD PRICING. Too much of either is imported and interest rates have no impact. The Fed removed them from the Chained CPI index for that reason. Those inflationary factors do show up in other ways. Without the Fed being expansionary, we would have faced the same issues as during The Depression with Hoover in office. If the Fed increased rates due to increases in oil and food, we would have slipped into The Depression. Think about it and forget "Boy-George Bush."
The Social Security payouts will be reflected upon what truly impacts the US and what we can control [my bold]. Social Security is solvent, is not bankrupt, and will be there in the 22ns century regardless of oil.
Distilling Run's arguments, he seems to be saying the following:
1. The Arab oil exporters do not care what the Fed does, and hence, what value of the dollar is. [This seems to contradict the numerous statements of the Algerian oil minister, who equated a 1% fall in the dollar to a $4 rise in the price of oil--and vice-versa]. Alternatively, the price of oil will rise despite a rising dollar or despite what OPEC thinks about the dollar.
2. If the Fed used food and energy to set its interest rates, we would have another depression.
3. We have no control over food and energy inflation, hence the Fed shouldn't concern itself with headline inflation. Neither should Social Security recipients be 'rewarded' by spikes in costs which we can't control. SS is solvent perhaps for this very reason.
Gregor: This place is full of chronic malcontents and grievance mongers who see a vast government conspiracy under every rock.
Real crude prices have dropping since the mid-80s and real food prices have been dropping since as long as anyone can remember. Excluding them would have looked like a recipe for increasing reported inflation and government obligations until a few years ago, so malicious intent is hard to prove. Incidentally, if the Fed underestimates inflation, its monetary policy will be more expansionary (pro-growth), which liberals have traditionally wanted and conservatives opposed.
There is considerable evidence, both from Europe and America, that conservative administrations are more vigilant on inflation and tolerant of unemployment, and liberal ones the other way round. Faced with deep recession, both types will cut interest rates or seek fiscal boost, just that for social democrat types, that point usually comes earlier.
It's true that much of Bush's economic rhetoric has been surprisingly Keynesian, but that's probably more a bait-and-switch than pandering. He makes the liberal argument for short term tax cuts in the hope that he can push through permanent cuts in that guise.
The CPI does include rent and imputed rent, just not the price of housing as an asset. It's hard to argue it should be otherwise, since it's supposed to be the cost of living, not the cost of accumulating stuff.
Distilling Gregor's arguments, he seems to be saying the following:
1. Real commodity prices have been dropping for over 20 years; to include them would in fact understate inflation, at least up until "a few years ago", so malicious intent on the part of the Fed to downplay inflation is hard to prove.
2. If the Fed understates inflation, that allows for a more expansionary policy--which has traditionally been the preserve of Democrats, not the Republicans.
3. Bush's rhetoric is Keynsian, but it's a bait and switch for tax cuts [as evidenced by the 2001 and 2003 tax cuts which will sunset shortly. A nice little recession might provide cover for extending them permanently].
4. As CPI is concerned with the cost of living, using imputed owner's rent is more suitable than actual home prices or the cost of owning a home [despite the fact that 2/3 of Americans own homes].
Finally, Revrick has some thoughts about the F&F bailouts.
Revrick: If we become major shareholders of F & F, we suddenly come into possession of $770 billion worth of garbage (all those subprime and Alt-A mortgages that will never be repaid). Do we foreclose on the 'owners' leaving us with all those future slums, I mean property? Do we throw all this unwanted housing onto the market at fire sale prices, thus causing an even greater decline in the value of homes and putting even more 'homeowners' under water? Do we just continue the charade that some day, somehow, they'll be repaid, thus leaving the housing market as a festering, sick sector for decades? Do we 'pay off' the mortgages with a huge injection of cash, courtesy of the Fed, thus guaranteeing that nobody, but nobody will want to hold any US bonds?
To which Run replies: What other gov in the world guarantees their bonds. If the US defaults then we have a world crisis today.
If was expected that Feddie, Fannie, and the FHA would be buying up these mortgages from lenders. It is also expected that those banks making bad loans will get those loans returned to them for further work. The cost to rescue Fannie and Freddie is $80 billion as compared to how much spent in Iraq and how much given to Israel?
The good reverend seems to have the following points:
1. If the govt. takes over F&F it gets possession of $770 B worth of junk mortgages, to which it can:
a) foreclose and get slums;
b) liquidate and drive housing prices even lower;
c) sit on 'em a la Japan during the lost decade of the 90s and SE Asian countries after the 1997 contagion; or
d) pay off the mortgages, diluting the dollar even more, and pissing off our major creditors? It's Hobson's choice.
Implication: maybe it would be better to let F&F go under.
Run's first point is that we shouldn't worry about Uncle Sam defaulting on Treasury bonds; if it happens, that's the end of the world as we know it. Implication: what's a little inflation among friends?
His second point is that banks making bad loans will get those loans returned to them for "further work", i.e., selling them off to gullible idiots or just sitting on them and waiting.
Finally, Run says that the cost of a F&F bailout is peanuts compared to the war. [Of course, there have been and will be other bailouts, and some have estimated the total at over a trillion].
While I probably can't conceal my doubt about some of Run's views, I think he is in the mainstream of the Dem Party Congress and possibly the rank and file--unfortunately. Moral Hazard just doesn't count with Run. He's more concerned about families making $175K having to pay AMT than he is about seniors living on $20K getting ripped off on their SS COLAs. Gregor makes some valid points, but I think under-estimates the extent to which the GOP has been following a bastardized Keynsian program to win votes--and very successfully, too, I would add. Revrick's points are pretty much in alignment with my own.