Category Archives: Ekonomistas

Weak defense from Ingves and Jansson

New Ekonomistas post. Here is an English translation.

Wolfgang Münchau (“What central banks should do to deal with bubbles,” Financial Times, July 14) has stated that a monetary policy experiment with calamitous results has been conducted in Sweden. A letter to Financial Times from Stefan Ingves and Per Jansson, Governor and Deputy Governor of the Riksbank, (“Monetary policy has had positive results in Sweden,” July 24) tries to defend the Riksbank’s policy. But the letter is full of misleading statements and the defense does not stand up to scrutiny.  Continue reading

The Riksbank and financial stability: No instruments, therefore not an objective

(English translation of an article of mine on the website of the Swedish business newspaper Dagens Industri, July 21, 2014.)

Should the Riksbank have financial stability as an objective besides price stability? According to an op-ed by Carl B. Hamilton in Dagens Industri on July 17, the answer is yes.[1]  According to Hamilton, this is even a practice already established by the Riksdag (the Swedish parliament). The Riksbank Act needs to be amended, but only as a formality.

But Hamilton forgets that the Riksbank has no effective policy instruments to affect financial stability, except in connection with the management of financial crises. He also forgets that the government with the support of seven parties in the Riksdag – including Folkpartiet (the Liberal Party) – has decided that the Riksbank will not receive any such instruments. Without the instruments, the Riksbank neither can nor should have financial stability as an objective.  Continue reading

Why leaning against the wind is the wrong monetary policy for Sweden

[English translation of Ekonomistas post.]
Vox column

In a new paper, ”Why Leaning Against the Wind is the Wrong Monetary Policy for Sweden,” which was presented at an NBER conference in Tokyo, June 20-21, I explain and summarize why leaning against the wind is the wrong monetary policy in Sweden.[1] According to the Riksbank’s own calculations, the benefit of this policy, in the form of lower risks from household debt, is completely insignificant compared to the cost in terms of higher unemployment and lower inflation. Since inflation has fallen much below the inflation target and households’ inflation expectations, the policy has instead actually increased households’ real debt burden and, if anything, increased any risks from the debt. Thereby, it has made more difficult the work of Finansinspektionens (FI, the Swedish FSA) to reduce any such risks.  Continue reading

Objective and balanced report from the Swedish FSA – partial and biased statement from the IMF

This is an English translation of an Ekonomistas post published on June 16, 2014.

During the week of June 2, 2014, Finansinspektionen (FI, the Swedish Financial Supervisory Authority) presented its report on financial stability, Stability in the Financial System, which is objective and balanced. During the same week, an IMF mission, as part of the regular Article IV consultation with member states, presented the mission’s Concluding Statement on the Swedish economy and economic policy. That statement is unfortunately partial and biased. The contrast between FI’s report and the mission’s statement could hardly be greater.  Continue reading

Jag har stöd för mina beräkningar – Svar till Andersson och Jonung III

[Detta inlägg har publicerats i Dagens Industri.]

Frågan är om Riksbanken genom att åsidosätta inflationsmålet har orsakat att i genomsnitt ungefär 38.000 fler personer har varit arbetslösa under perioden 1997–2011. Man kan tycka att denna fråga är för allvarlig för att, i Lundaspexstil, raljera med och skämta om. Men det gör Fredrik Andersson och Lars Jonung i en debattartikel i Dagens industri den 5 juni. Bland alla försök till skämt finns dessutom bara två påståenden om fakta och data. Båda är osanna.

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Anders Borg about the Fiscal Policy Council evaluating the Riksbank’s monetary policy

[Ekonomistas post, in Swedish.]

In an op-ed in  Dagens Nyheter (English translation here), I argued that the democratic control of the Riksbank should be improved, since the Riksbank had neglected both fulfilling the inflation target and supporting the most important goal of Swedish economic policy, full employment. Among other things, I suggested that the Fiscal Policy Council should get additional resources and an expanded mandate to evaluate monetary policy. It may also be appropriate to move the new Fiscal and Monetary Policy Council to the Riksdag, the Swedish parliament. According to Bloomberg Finance Minister Anders Borg has now commented on the issue.  Continue reading

New demands for amortization, while zero inflation eliminates the automatic amortization

[New Ekonomistas post (in Swedish). Here is an English translation.]

In a speech at the meeting of the Swedish Economic Association (Nationalekonomiska föreningen) on May 28, 2014, Riksbank Governor Stefan Ingves suggested a compulsory amortization requirement and showed some calculations for such a requirement that, with a 50-year amortization period, would result in a reduction of a given household loan of 2 percent per year. Strangely enough, he avoided mentioning that the zero inflation Sweden has suffered the last few years, caused by the Riksbank’s leaning against the wind, has eliminated the automatic amortization of 2 percent per year that an inflation rate equal to the target of 2 percent otherwise would have caused.  Continue reading

DN Debatt: Skärp den demokratiska kontrollen av Riksbanken

Penningpolitiken har misslyckats. Riksbankens agerande har lett till för låg inflation och för hög arbetslöshet. Politiken brister på grund av att Riksbankschefen fått för stor makt och Riksdagens uppföljning och kontroll inte fungerar. För att avhjälpa bristerna bör den demokratiska kontrollen av Riksbanken skärpas, Riksbanksfullmäktiges utnämningspolitik förbättras, och ansvarfördelningen mellan penningpolitiken och makrotillsynen klargöras.

Artikel på DN Debatt, “Skärp den demokratiska kontrollen av Riksbanken,” 2014-05-28, mot bakgrund av en utförligare artikel i Ekonomisk debatt nr 4, “Riksbanken, måluppfyllelsen och den demokratiska kontrollen“.  Continue reading

The household debt ratio is an unsuitable risk measure – there are much better ones

New Ekonomistas post (in Swedish). Here is an English translation.

The Riksbank focuses one-sidedly on the debt ratio, household debt relative to disposable income, as a measure of any risks associated with household debt. An example is the Riksbank’s latest Economic Commentary on household debt, which is discussed in this post. But on a closer examination, the debt ratio is an unsuitable risk measure. There are much better ones. And they give a very different picture of the risks associated with household debt.  Continue reading

The Riksbank’s new study of household debt – misleading conclusions, or deliberate disinformation?

New Ekonomistas post. This is an English translation.

The Riksbank has, in a new Economic Commentary about household debt, presented with a press conference and a speech by executive board member Cecilia Skingsley, announced what seems to be dramatic conclusions and a big news item, which also been much mentioned in the media:

  • The problems associated with debt would be both more extensive and more comprehensive than we have previously realized.
  • Households would in general be highly indebted in relation to their incomes, above all low and middle-income earners.

However, the conclusions do not stand up to scrutiny. It appears that the media and general public have been misled.  Continue reading

Fed and the Riksbank about low inflation and increased debt burden: A comparison

New Ekonomistas post (in Swedish). Here is an English translation.

Central banks all over the world know that one of the problems with low inflation and deflation is that they increase the debt burden. But this insight seems, strangely enough, to be missing at the Riksbank, at least among the hawkish majority of the executive board. This is apparent when one compares statements of Fed Chair Janet Yellen and Riksbank Governor Stefan Ingves on this issue.  Continue reading

Deflation in Sweden: Questions and answers

New Ekonomistas post (in Swedish). This is an English translation.

Sweden has deflation, that is, negative inflation. According to Statistics Sweden, CPI inflation in March was minus 0.6 percent. As we can see in the figure below, CPI inflation has been around zero since November 2012, and since January 2014 it has been negative. CPIF and HICP inflation i March was zero and minus 0.4 percent, respectively. We see that CPIF and HICP inflation has been on a downward trend since the summer of 2013. The inflation rate in Sweden is now among the lowest in the world. What has caused the deflation, what are its consequences, could Sweden end up in a similar situation as Japan, and what can be done about the problem?

Update October 14: Data trough September 2014 are not looking good. Continue reading

The Riksbank’s continued contradictions and evasive answers about household debt

English translation of Ekonomistas post (in Swedish).

At the latest policy meeting and decision, the Riksbank repeated its statements that a lower policy rate would increase the risks associated with household indebtedness. At the same time these statements are contradicted by the Riksbank’s own analysis. According to this, the cost of a lower policy rate is only about 0.4 percent of the benefit, and hence negligible relative to the benefit. On a direct question about this at the latest press conference, Governor Ingves continued to give evasive answers.

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