Liquidity: Meaning, Measurement, Management
By Lucas, Robert E | |
Proquest LLC |
This article is based on the author's
"We are
I like this brief mission statement from the Bank of
Financial stability is another classic responsibility of the Fed. Financial panics are the results of sudden declines in liquidity, and we know that Fed actions can partially offset liquidity declines in an economy on short notice. Is there an underlying economic theory that tells us how this can be done, or better yet, how to arrange matters so that liquidity declines are less likely to occur in the first place? There has been a flood of economic theorizing on this question since 2008, much of it valuable and stimulating, but nothing like the solid evidence that guides the monetary control of inflation has yet been found. My second objective is to explain why short-run monetary stability is so much harder to control than long-run inflation rates.
THE FED AND THE PAYMENTS SYSTEM
The main-really, the only-tool the Fed has for influencing the inflation rate is its ability to add to or subtract from the amount of government-issued money-I'll call it cash-in the hands of the public. This is done, of course, by selling government bonds for cash, decreasing the cash held by the public, or buying bonds with cash, and so increasing the cash outstanding. Here I take a Monetarist view that (i) open market operations affect the quantity of liquidity in the system-the money supply, if you like-and (ii) changes in this magnitude are what determine inflation rates.
These operations affect interest rates, too-how could they not?-but the assets used in monetary policy are money market instruments with yields that are not closely related to interest rates in general. This is clear from Figure 1, which plots seven different interest rates over the period 1970-2012. The three blue curves on the figure are the federal funds rate and rates for T-bills and 3-month certificates of deposit (CDs). They are all alike. High-grade commercial paper would fit right in too. The other four series are rates for auto loans, home mortgages, long-term bonds, and the yield on Baa-rated securities. One can see from the figure that these four do not closely track the three money market yields. No one uses these money market instruments to finance an investment project, a new house, or a college education. These are specialized assets that are useful in cash management: interest-bearing securities that can be easily converted into non-interest-bearing cash as payments come due. In a cashless economy (if there were such a thing), they would not exist at all.
The only reason anyone ever holds cash is to be ready to make payments to someone. That's it. There is no other reason to hold this dominated asset-an asset that has no risk advantage over other assets that offer a higher return. This fact gives rise to a host of other assets that people believe can be traded for cash on short notice, on predictable terms, and without undue labor costs. These qualities define the terms liquidity and liquid asset. These terms have no meaning outside a payments system. What we mean by liquid assets, then, is a combination of government-issued cash together with various kinds of promissory notesIOUs, really-that play a role in the payments system by economizing on cash. Like cash, all these money market instruments have lower yields than other assets with the same risk characteristics: They command a liquidity premium. (Again, look at Figure 1.)
It would be useful to have a theoretical understanding of the relationships of different money market instruments to one another. One might think of these assets as being ordered according to the size of their liquidity premiums: government-issued cash first, then bank demand deposits, then Treasury bills and other money market instruments, and so on. As we go down such a list, the effort involved in converting each asset to cash increases. The convenience of the most-liquid assets offsets their lower yields. Think of a "technology" where labor (ours and that of people we employ) and various liquid assets are combined to generate the highest return consistent with payment objectives without increasing risk.
INFLATION AND THE QUANTITY THEORY OF MONEY
We do not now have an established model of such a payments system (though there is a great deal of current research that seems headed in this direction). So I will do what theorists do and replace the complicated reality sketched above with a much simpler, fictional world that will serve as a useful surrogate for some purposes. The surrogate I describe yields some sharp predictions on observable variables. As I will illustrate shortly, these predictions conform extremely well to historical evidence.
Step back from the complexity of actual money markets, then, and imagine an economy in which every payment is made in cash: There is no choice among payment methods and no one will accept any sort of IOU. In this setting, money holdings are well defined and it is natural to assume that average money holdings of individuals and firms will be proportional to spending flows: For some constant K,
$ Spending/year = K x (Average $ money holdings).
If my spending doubles, then I want to hold twice as much cash. If the money supply doubles, so will everyone's spending.
In terms of growth rates, the above formula implies that
% Spending growth/year = % Money growth/year.
Finally, we add the hypothesis that real growth is a constant 3 percent per year, unaffected by monetary policy. Then,
Inflation = % Money growth/year - 3%.
This formula is one expression of what we call the quantity theory of money.
Can these strong assumptions possibly express some useful facts? Lets look at some evidence. To do so, we first need to match objects in the model as best we can with objects we can measure. The National Economic Accounts provide measures of inflation, or we can use the very similar consumer price index (CPI). For the money supply, we have an embarrassment of riches because there is so little agreement on the meaning of the term "money supply" or even whether this idea is worth measuring. (Of course, the same problem arises with the term "liquidity") Despite this, many measures of money have been proposed and usefully applied over the years.
The measures of money include MO (actual government-supplied cash), Ml (publicly held currency plus demand deposits), M2 (Ml plus time deposits), and the even broader M3. All of these contain some information about the liquidity in an economy. If we use any but the first of these, we are treating a complicated mix of different liquid assets as though it were a homogeneous "money supply." Clearly there is no right way to do this, but there are useful ways.
We look first at cross-country evidence from
The results are a striking confirmation of the one-for-one effects of money growth on inflation. The money measure used in Figure 2 is M2, but Table 1 shows that MO and Ml yield very similar results. Figure 3 plots average real gross domestic product (GDP) growth over the same period and the same countries. Using the entire sample, they appear unrelated. For the subsample of members of the
We have looked at 30-year average inflation rates across countries. Can we learn more from data over time within specific countries? This is a harder question, but worth pursuing. Here I rely on a series of papers by
Figure 5 plots the monetary base (MO) and inflation rates for the
Figures 7 through 9 all apply the same filter used in Figure 6. They differ in the countries studied, the time periods, and the measures of the money supply used. There are interesting differences among these, to be sure, but it is easy to see the predominance of this one-for-one relation in all of them.
These data compare filtered versions of two completely different time series-inflation rates (determined by millions of individual prices) and money growth rates (based on a variety of liquidity measures), over which the Fed has decisive influence. People who do not do empirical work in economics (which includes many economists!) may not appreciate just how good these results are, but I would not recommend a scientific career to anyone who is not impressed by this evidence.
But are these results simply too good to be true? We know that payments systems in reality involve a mix of many different liquid assets. How can a theory that ignores these complexities, as the quantity theory does, do so well? It must be the case that, at least in the long run, all these different forms of liquidity grow at something like a common rate, maintaining fairly stable shares in money market portfolios over time. If this is so, it would not be surprising if measures such as MO, Ml, and so on simply reflect different collections of liquid assets. This idea is disturbingly vague, I know. It would be a real step forward if it could be replaced by a more precisely stated hypothesis.
Accepting some form of the quantity theory of money, then, we have a theory of inflation. How do we apply this theory to control the inflation rate? One possibility would be to commit to a constant rate of money growth, chosen to imply the desired inflation rate. But what if the theory is not quite accurate or becomes obsolete because of changes in banking practices? A better, more flexible idea, developed in the 1970s, is inflation targeting. The central bank sets a goal, a target of (say) 2 percent-or perhaps a range such as 1 to 3 percent-and if actual inflation goes above the targeted range, the bank reduces the rate of money growth. If inflation continues above 3 percent, the bank reduces the money growth rate some more and keeps taking money out of the system until inflation is brought back within the targeted range. How do we know this will work? All the evidence I have just presented implies that it will. (It also implies that this may take some time.) Central banks all over the world that have used inflation targeting (stated or not) have had remarkable success in keeping inflation low and stable since the early 1980s, even during and after the crisis of 2008.
I have described inflation targeting as though it is implemented by adding to or reducing the money supply. As noted previously, today it is more customary to describe monetary policy as carried out by changes in short-term money market rates, not as changes in the money supply. In normal times, changes in the money supply are effected through trades in money markets; expanding the money supply and reducing the federal funds rate are just two ways of saying the same thing. There is not much reason to argue over the terminology. But since 2008 the funds rate has been so close to zero that reducing the rate is either impossible or meaningless. We talk about "unconventional policy" and "quantitative easing." From the Monetarist view that I am taking, of course, nothing could be more conventional than "quantitative easing." It is just another way to say "increasing the money supply." The Fed does this by buying something other than short-term government securities-long-term governments bonds, for example-but almost any asset would do.
THE NATURE OF FINANCIAL CRISES
I have spent most of my time on the easy parts of monetary policy: the actions that central banks know how to use to stabilize inflation. I have outlined some of the evidence on which these actions are largely based. I have noted the remarkable success of inflation targeting, persisting through the crisis of 2008-09 and the years since. Nevertheless, it must also be said that the financial crisis of 2008 was very costly in terms of lost production, and there is little agreement even among leading economists on how it happened and how it might have been prevented. Some additional discussion of this event seems warranted.
The quantity theory that I have described is consistent with the idea that a sudden reduction in the money supply leads to deflation and reduction in spending. This happens because a sudden loss of liquidity leads people to reduce spending to rebuild a desired ratio of cash to spending flows. But central banks do not just suddenly reduce the money supply. They did not do so in the 1929 crash or in 2008-09. The source of a financial crisis or panic generally lies in a loss of confidence in privately issued promises of cash, not in reductions in governmentsupplied money. If so, the quantity theory of money as I have applied it here-treating all liquid assets as though they were cash-will not be helpful in the analysis of such crises.
In the 1930s, it was runs on uninsured bank deposits that suffered a loss of confidence. In 2008, it was the "run on repo" (using the terminology
To make progress in understanding these events, we need to get into the details of the payments technology, of the mix of liquid assets-part cash but mostly promises of cashthat are used to pay the bills. We begin with some data on U.S. cash flows tabulated by the Fed.
The total annual payments-cash transfers over the year-recorded in Table 2 add up to
Look at the differences in transaction sizes. Automated clearinghouse payments and checks processed total about
Imagine trying to carry out trading at this volume using government-provided cash, paying no interest or nearly so, to settle accounts. The opportunity cost would be staggering. Financial firms have much larger incentives to economize on cash than do households and nonfinancial firms exactly because their payment rates are orders of magnitude larger. To deal with this problem, they adopt methods to clear among themselves using suitably designed derivative securities. "Suitably designed"? A useful instrument will have both a low trading cost (i.e., labor costs: financial and legal experts) and a solid backup plan if it falls in valuegood collateral. There is nothing new about the financial sectors need to economize on cash or on the methods it uses to do so. Promises to pay have substituted for payments in cash since records were kept on cuneiform tablets.
There is nothing necessarily dishonest or fraudulent in this manner of trading, this economizing on cash. We all do it to some degree, and people managing cash flows that differ from ours by many orders of magnitude do it much, much better. They do this today by constructing short-term liquid assets from pieces of illiquid securities. Some of these securities were derived from mortgages. Many other securities could have been and, indeed, have been used.1 As with any IOU, creditors accept it only when they think they can pass it on. What we mean by a "financial crisis" is an occasion when this confidence vanishes-for whatever reason. The effect of this situation is just like an old-fashioned bank run: Financial firms that were working with minimal amounts of cash are now cash hungry. But there is only so much cash out there, so this can only mean that cash available to households and nonfinancial firms has to shrink.
In quantity-theoretic terms, the money supply available for purchases of goods and services shrinks drastically, implying deflation or losses of production or both. In the 1930s, both of these occurred. In 2008-09, the dramatic, timely injection of new reserves led to a much better outcome. But we can hardly view this as a solution to the problem. In the two quarters following the failure of
CONCLUDING REMARKS
The crisis of 2008-09 revealed weak points in some of our favorite models. Was this a failure of economics? Relative to what we would like to have known, of course. But we can also see enormous progress that would have pleased
On the other hand, crisis prevention-the elimination of runs-is still largely an unsolved problem. Any solution must involve a governmental guarantee of deposits, insurance of some kind, and this in turn necessitates regulations on the assets deposit-takers can hold. The 1933 Glass-Steagall Act, based on a mixture of deposit insurance and the regulation of designated commercial banks, was followed by 75 crisis-free years. The act was repealed in 1999, but by then the financial sector and large businesses had moved deposits out of commercial banks.
The Dodd-Frank Act acknowledged this reality and incorporated investment banks under regulation by the Fed. This response completely misses the point. The main reason commercial banks lost deposits in the 1970s and 1980s was the combination of Regulation Q, which prevented interest on deposits, and the onset of inflation. Look again at Figure 1. Why did anyone hold zero-interest deposits in 1980? What if Glass-Steagall had remained in force but with Regulation Q removed? When banks are regulated, there will always be incentives to create liquid assets outside the banking system, however broadly banks are defined. The long, successful history of Glass-Steagall shows that these incentives need not be fatal to regulation, as long as the costs remain reasonable. *
NOTE
1 Seethe long list of examples of securitized assetclasses in Gorton (2010).
REFERENCES
Benati, Luca. "Long-Run Evidence on Money Growth and I nf la tion"
Benati, Luca. "Long Run Evidence on Money Growth and Inflation. Working Paper Series No. 1027,
Friedman, Milton and Schwartz, Anna I. A Monetary History of
Gorton, Gary. Slapped by the Invisible Hand: The Panic of2007.
McCandless, George and Weber, Warren E."Some Monetary Facts."
O'Donoghue, Jim; Goulding, Louise and Allen, Grahame. "Consumer Price Inflation Since 1750." Economic Trends,
Robert E. Lucas,Jr. is the John Dewey Distinguished Service Professorin Economics attheUniversityofChicagoand received the Nobel Prize in economics in 1995.
©2014,The Federal Reserve Bankof St. Louis. The views expressed in this article are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the
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