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What The Fed's "Crystal Ball" Says Is The Reason For The Worst Recovery Ever

Tyler Durden's picture




 

Authored by Andrea Tambalotti and Argia Sbordone via The New York Fed's Liberty Street Economics blog,

The severe recession experienced by the U.S. economy between December 2007 and June 2009 has given way to a disappointing recovery. It took three and a half years for GDP to return to its pre-recession peak, and by most accounts this broad measure of economic activity remains below trend today. What precipitated the U.S. economy into the worst recession since the Great Depression? And what headwinds are holding back the recovery? Are these headwinds permanent, calling for a revision of our assessment of the economy’s speed limit? Or are they transitory, although very long-lasting, as the historical record on the persistent damages inflicted by financial crisis seems to suggest? In this post, we address these questions through the lens of the FRBNY DSGE model.

DSGE models are a particularly suitable tool to look under the economy’s hood and illuminate its inner workings. Their structure allows us to decompose the evolution of the key macroeconomic variables that we can measure—such as GDP and inflation—in terms of their underlying driving forces, which are unobserved. In terms of the automotive metaphor, with a model of the car/economy in hand, we can trace back its observed behavior—direction and speed, say—to its fundamental determinants, such as the conditions of the road and the actions of the driver on the accelerator and the brakes. The key difference of course is that the economy is much more complicated than a car, and does not have one driver behind the wheel. Therefore our model can only provide a simplified, and in many cases imperfect, account of its workings. Even with these simplifications, however, the model provides useful insights.

The FRBNY DSGE model attributes the observed movements in macroeconomic variables to several fundamental disturbances, as explained in the previous post in this series and in more detail in our staff report. As it turns out, only four of these shocks account for the bulk of the movements in GDP and inflation since the Great Recession.

  • A shock to total factor productivity (TFP), which affects the overall ability of the economy to produce output from any given amount of labor and capital inputs. A positive TFP shock results in higher GDP and, at the same time, in lower costs of production and hence lower inflation. In our model, shifts in TFP have a permanent effect on the economy’s productive potential. They capture a whole range of “structural” factors that will affect the growth trajectory of the economy for the foreseeable future.
  • A financial (or spread) shock stemming from increases in the perceived riskiness of borrowers, which induces banks and other intermediaries to charge higher interest rates on loans, thereby widening credit spreads. An increase in perceived risk (a positive realization of this shock) leads to a large increase in the cost of capital for entrepreneurs, which depresses investment demand and hence GDP growth. As a result of the lower demand, inflation also falls. Although the spikes in spreads associated with this shock tend to be relatively short-lived, as they were during the crisis, their effects can linger well past the most acute phase of market disruptions, with persistently tight credit conditions depressing demand, and hence output and inflation, for several years. Unlike the TFP shocks, however, these financial disturbances are not permanent, and their effects will ultimately dissipate, returning the economy to its pre-crisis growth trajectory.
  • A shock to investment demand, whose negative realizations persistently depress capital formation, leading to lower growth and lower inflation. This shock has very similar macroeconomic effects to the risk shock we just described, with the crucial difference that it does not move credit spreads. Therefore, this disturbance can be thought of as capturing financial and other factors that do not manifest themselves in higher spreads, but that nonetheless affect firms’ willingness or ability to invest. Examples of such factors are a reluctance to lend by banks that does not lead to higher interest rates on loans, but for instance to a rationing of credit to certain borrowers, as well as the perception by firms of a particularly uncertain outlook, which delays their investment decisions.
  • Shocks to monetary policy, capturing changes in the monetary policy stance not reflected in the policy rate, such as the introduction of forward guidance.

The two charts below present the contributions of these four factors to the evolution of past observed and future projected GDP growth and inflation between 2007 and 2018. The variables are in deviation from their sample mean. Released data are represented by the black line. The projections for the rest of 2014 and beyond, captured by the red line, come from the model, as explained in more detail in the last post in this series. The colored bars represent the contribution of the corresponding driving force to the observed (or projected) outcome at any given point in time.

Contribution of Shocks to Past and Projected GDP

Contribution of Shocks to Past and Projected Inflation

The first feature of this decomposition that we want to highlight is the paramount importance of spread shocks (in purple) during the recession. Starting at the end of 2007, the economy experiences a sequence of large shocks to credit spreads, driven by an increase in the perceived riskiness of borrowers. This progressive increase in risk is accompanied by deteriorating credit conditions, culminating in two spikes in spreads in the third and fourth quarters of 2008 with the failure of Lehman Brothers. These abrupt increases in the cost of credit account for a decline in quarterly GDP growth of more than 5 percentage points (annualized), which is about half of the total drop in output growth at the nadir of the recession. Inflation is also significantly affected by these shocks, which account for about three quarters of the decline in inflation in the second half of 2008.

The other half of the decline in GDP growth in 2008 stems from significant declines in TFP (the red bars). As we already pointed out, TFP shocks have permanent effects on the productive capacity of the economy in our framework, suggesting that the recession caused some lasting damage. However, the negative shocks of 2008 are followed by positive shocks, with the red bars primarily contributing to GDP growth. As a result, the level of TFP, and hence of potential output in our model, emerges largely unscathed at the present time.

As 2008 unfolds and the recession quickly worsens, the only force pushing against the fast deterioration in economic conditions is monetary policy. The orange bars—monetary policy shocks—do not represent the overall reaction of monetary policy to economic developments, which includes changes in the policy rate, but rather the extent to which this reaction exceeds what “normal,” historical reaction patterns would imply. Therefore, the large contributions of the orange bars suggest that the Federal Reserve was particularly aggressive in fighting the crisis early on, deploying several tools that went beyond its conventional weaponry. According to our model’s accounting, this extra effort is worth 2 to 3 percentage points of annual GDP growth in the middle of 2008, for a total boost to GDP of roughly 2 percent for 2008 as a whole. And this estimate does not even include the effects of the many credit and liquidity programs the Fed engaged in to ameliorate conditions in financial markets at the height of their stress.

Moving on to the recovery phase, which according to NBER dating starts in the middle of 2009, we can see that shocks to investment demand (in light blue) are the main headwinds holding back the economy. As credit spreads return to normal, the effect of financial risk shocks (in purple) dissipates, even though their overall effect continues to be a drag on growth and inflation. At this point, however, investment shocks start taking on a very large negative role in pushing down both GDP growth and inflation. The key feature of these shocks is the persistence of their effect on both variables, which remain depressed throughout the recovery phase, and into the forecast horizon. Admittedly, the fundamentals of investment shocks are harder to characterize than those of the spread or TFP shocks, representing any factor unrelated to credit spreads that might still restrain investment demand. Many such factors have been identified over time as playing a role in the sluggish recovery, including an overall reluctance of banks and other intermediaries to expose their balance sheets to risk, regardless of the pricing of that risk, and the tendency of firms to delay projects in the face of unusually uncertain prospects. Either way, our model squarely points to investment demand shocks as playing a fundamental role in retarding the recovery, consistent with the view that weak investment, more than consumption, has been behind the slow pace of growth and subdued inflation.

Monetary policy remains on the other side of the ledger over the recovery period, serving to counteract the negative effects of the shocks weighing on the economy. Even with the policy rate against its zero lower bound, monetary policy continues to lift economic activity and prevent inflation from falling too far below target, as demonstrated by the positive orange bars in the chart. In the model, this stimulus is achieved through forward guidance, whose effect on expected future policy rates, and hence on long-term rates, is explicitly taken into account in the model estimation.

The model’s forecast for the evolution of the economy over the next few years (the red lines in both charts) remains persistently subpar, with GDP growth about half a percentage point below its mean and inflation recovering very slowly—scenarios that will be discussed in more detail in the last post in this series. Decomposing the forecasts into their determinants highlights two main features. First, the headwinds represented by tight credit and the other factors holding back investment demand abate only gradually, contributing to restrain the economy over the medium term. Second, monetary policy starts representing a drag on growth and inflation over the forecast horizon, even though the policy rate remains lower than it would otherwise be. The reason is that, in the model, monetary policy has no long-run effects on the real economy, so monetary policy shocks can only affect the level of output temporarily.

In conclusion, this analysis finds little evidence of the permanent structural damage to the economy’s productive potential that many commentators see as the main culprit for the subpar recovery from the Great Recession. Instead, our decomposition is quite supportive of the narrative popularized by Reinhart and Rogoff and more recently by Mian and Sufi, according to which a slow recovery is what we should have expected owing to the very persistent damage inflicted by the financial crisis on the real economy. In the FRBNY DSGE model, this damage manifests itself as a sequence of negative shocks to investment demand—shocks that capture many of the headwinds often mentioned as an impediment to a more robust recovery. At the same time, our model suggests that monetary policy played an important role in cushioning the blow from the financial crisis and in sustaining the recovery, which could have been significantly more disappointing without the aggressive actions undertaken by the Fed.

 

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Wed, 09/24/2014 - 20:14 | 5254023 insanelysane
insanelysane's picture

Global cooling?

Wed, 09/24/2014 - 20:24 | 5254056 Cautiously Pess...
Cautiously Pessimistic's picture

Peak 29.5 hour jobs?

/also known as Obama's Peak in certain academic circles

Wed, 09/24/2014 - 21:35 | 5254215 philipat
philipat's picture

They can use all the Models the PhD's in academia can dream up to justify their neo-Keynsian BS. However, Japan provides a real time real life illustration of the outcomes of neo-Keynsian excess. Of course, The Fed/Krugman et al. suggest that "Japan is different" because it has structural problems. So, let me see, the US doesn't have structural problems?

Wed, 09/24/2014 - 22:49 | 5254404 knukles
knukles's picture

Who really cares anymore.  We can discuss all day long but the fixes will not come, that is any of them that any of us might suggest, until the entire governmental. financial, industrial complex is disentangled, globally.
Until then, sleep tight, don't let the Ebola bugs bite.

Wed, 09/24/2014 - 23:23 | 5254477 OldPhart
OldPhart's picture

In what year are we going to be looking back at this decade and the next and start calling the period "The Greatest Depression"?

Wed, 09/24/2014 - 20:20 | 5254045 khakuda
khakuda's picture

In other words, "Yay for us at the Fed! We helped contain the damage of the late 90s stock market bubble we fostered and the real estate bubble we helped cause by building another bubble!"

We are geniuses and get to keep our jobs, unlike you, foolish readers.

Wed, 09/24/2014 - 20:25 | 5254061 Keltner Channel Surf
Keltner Channel Surf's picture

Even so, their use of the word "contribution" is mildly encouraging.  To alter the 12-step program slightly:  "the first step is to admit you caused the problem"

Wed, 09/24/2014 - 20:27 | 5254067 stormsailor
stormsailor's picture

reminds me of a joke i heard a long long time ago.  an eccentric man was driving his t model down the road and picked up a hitchhiker.  the hitchhiker noticed that every few miles the man reached down into a bucket and grabbed a pinch of some sort of powder and threw it out the window.   after observing this many times the hitchhiker asked him, "what is that powder for",  the driver replied "its lion powder, it keeps the lions away"  the hitchhiker said, "nobody has ever seen a lion in this part of the country: to which the driver replied, "see, it works"

Wed, 09/24/2014 - 20:29 | 5254073 adr
adr's picture

What a load of garbage made up of 26 letters in random combinations.

The worst recovery ever was caused by the manipulation of the market by the Fed. The bubble that caused the most severe downturn since the Great Depression was caused by market manipulation from the Fed.

The only conclusion to reach is that all economic ills are caused by the Fed.

The only way to fix economic ills is to get rid of the Fed.

Wed, 09/24/2014 - 23:26 | 5254482 OldPhart
OldPhart's picture

While Constitutionally our money is supposed to be controlled by Congress.  What are the expectations from that noble band of idiots?  I want the FED hung with piano wire.  But would conned-grease do any better?

Wed, 09/24/2014 - 20:45 | 5254121 madbraz
madbraz's picture

They really should close that place down (NY Fed), to never open again. Leave it to the rats, as a guest speaker once dared opine. No good comes out of there, no noble act, thought or deed.

As Apu from Seinfeld would say...very bad Jerry, very very bad

Wed, 09/24/2014 - 20:56 | 5254146 Himins
Himins's picture

It might could have don't been a lot better/worse maybe i think and that's the exact answer so help me god.

 

Thu, 09/25/2014 - 00:10 | 5254544 Spungo
Spungo's picture

I have complete faith in our central planning overlords

Thu, 09/25/2014 - 01:53 | 5254650 Cthonic
Cthonic's picture

Hari and Dors? Not this pair.

Thu, 09/25/2014 - 06:35 | 5254798 overmedicatedun...
overmedicatedundersexed's picture

our noble fed guru's might want to ask a person that has had his wealth stolen, by robbers in the night, what impact CRIME has on that person's productivity and what head winds that person faces in poverty.

2008 trillions pulled from our economy, no one charged ..no real truthful explanation of where / to whom went the spoils..ask cong kanjorski (ret) who got the 500 billion pulled from MM in one day..

analysis of poverty induced by theft of one's wealth would be a better model for our economy.

Thu, 09/25/2014 - 08:30 | 5254920 Tachyon5321
Tachyon5321's picture

 

 

 

According to the Democrats this is all Bush's fault and this could all be fixed by having more goverment regulations, much higher taxes and more welfare expenditures.  

Thu, 09/25/2014 - 20:51 | 5258151 MASTER OF UNIVERSE
MASTER OF UNIVERSE's picture

Apologists for the scumbag FED klept-O-crats have their noses so far up the butts of the FED that they cannot see or think rationally anymore.

This obfuscation in the form of 'theory' in 'macroeconomics' does not pass Billy of Ockham's razor. The rule of parsimony has been thrown out entirely, and I, for one, think Z/H is pandering to dangerous delusions

in the industry it purports to be critical of. Z/H, for myself, is a place to learn stuff I would not otherwise read elsewhere. Stop promulgating this pseudo-scientific claptrap and find more critical writers please. This article is a sad piece of z/h dogshit in the park of economics. Scoop the poop on Z/H by getting better writers with a critical view as opposed to the present lacky view that is merely more horseshit propaganda that I don't appreciate as an empiricist whatsoever, motherfuckers.

Thu, 09/25/2014 - 21:04 | 5258176 MASTER OF UNIVERSE
MASTER OF UNIVERSE's picture

and another thing, motherfuckers....

 

The 2008 _DEPRESSION_ is greater than the 30s _depression_ by leaps and bounds. No recovery has been achieved whatsoever and no recovery will ever be achieved, _EVER_, motherfuckers. If one more business quarter manifests and you are not onboard with the view that

there will _NEVER_ be a recovery then you are a full bore functional retard incapable of forming a thought to any degree of depth that would ultimately resemble consciousness to any rational scientist in contemporary society, motherfucker!

Fri, 09/26/2014 - 11:01 | 5259628 willyrave
willyrave's picture

Situation of the US economy make many scientists and economists concerned. With the processes of globalization and internationalization economy became very sensitive to what is happening in other leader countries. It would be helpful to get the necessary Installment Credit in emergency cases.

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