speeches · October 29, 1997
Regional President Speech
Jerry L. Jordan · President
/Iondl030
Rev. 10/27/97
(Preliminary)
Money, Fiscal Discipline, and Growth
remarks by
Jerry L. Jordan
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
Ninth Annual State of the International Economy Conference
sponsored by the Institute of Economic Affairs
City Conference Centre
London, England
Thursday, October 30,1997
History will regard the last quarter of the twentieth century as a time when the
world reawakened to the observations of Adam Smith: that the specialization and trade
fostered by market economies are ultimately the source of the wealth of nations. At no
time in history have markets spread so rapidly, and with such promising prospects, as in
the last 15 years. Europe’s move to a single market for capital, goods, and labor is part of
a worldwide trend toward greater reliance on unfettered markets for the allocation of
productive resources.
Economists do not question the merits of Europe’s single market initiative on
efficiency grounds. Integration allows producers to specialize more fully in goods for
which they have a comparative advantage and permits factors of production to seek their
highest return. However, economists are still debating the challenges associated with the
European Monetary Union (EMU). Although a common currency reduces transaction
costs involved in cross-border exchange, it also eliminates exchange-rate changes as an
adjustment mechanism to blunt the effects of asymmetric economic shocks. The debate
does not concern whether monetary union is achievable, or even sustainable; it centers on
whether people understand the potential real economic consequences of monetary union
and whether they are prepared to meet the challenges. The cost-benefit calculation
becomes particularly difficult because, ultimately, European political integration is a
necessary condition for a successful monetary union.
I do not intend to debate the relative merits of monetary union today. Instead, I
will focus on the role of sound money in promoting prosperity and end with some
challenges faced by every monetary authority in maintaining sound money, placing
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particular emphasis on the hazards emanating from fiscal policies. My views stem from a
belief that as central bankers pursue their obligation to maintain their currency’s
purchasing power, there are clear implications for the array of options available to fiscal
authorities. In the context of EMU, separation of monetary policy from the conduct of
fiscal policies will place very stringent constraints on individual member countries.
Transaction Costs and Money
The act of undertaking economic exchange involves information and transaction
costs that are only indirectly reflected in relative prices of goods and services. These real
resource costs, which influence the extent of trade, the degree of specialization, and the
economic benefit derived therefrom, stem primarily from the difficulty of acquiring
information about the quality of the goods, their true current values, and the
trustworthiness of the counterparty. The lower the costs of information, the more
opportunities there are for individuals to undertake exchanges that maximize mutual
welfare. When we find ways to conserve productive resources devoted to information
gathering and conducting exchange, we have more resources available for creating
consumable output.
Ironically, the costs of exchange increase with the extent of specialization and the
scope of markets, since specialization implies that people, who are expert in specific
economic activities, lack complete information about other endeavors. Societies have
always sought ways to reduce the costs associated with exchange. Governments can
make a positive contribution in the form of binding standards. For example,
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harmonization of European conventions, rules, and laws — as part of the single market
initiative — is welfare enhancing because the economic infrastructure essential to markets
is being strengthened. Reforms that strengthen property rights and remove political
boundaries to resource utilization will raise standards of living.
Also prominent among the institutional arrangements traditionally provided by
governments has been the forms of money used to facilitate payments. The word
“money” means different things to different people; the term cannot be used without
some ambiguity. Most important, money is the means of final payment that best reduces
the costs of economic exchange.
We tend to take for granted the resources that sound money frees for alternative
uses, but they are enormous. Indeed, the greater the specialization and more complex our
economies become, the more essential it is to provide stable monetary and payments
systems. There can be no doubt about the importance of sound money; but achieving and
maintaining it can be a challenge.
Inside and Outside Money
To some extent, many assets can serve some of the functions of money.
Historically, many financial instruments have been used to facilitate exchange. The
evolution of money appears to reflect a balance of convenience in use against the risk that
a particular form of money might depreciate unexpectedly. Fully convertible paper
currency or “bank notes” came into use because they were more convenient than coins,
particularly in large transactions, and were inherently less expensive to produce. But they
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involved more risk than commodity money, since they relied on a faith that the
institutions issuing them would indeed redeem them for commodity money at par. These
early instruments were initially claims to commodity money. Eventually, however, as the
public gained confidence in the stability of their purchasing power, these paper
instruments came to be regarded as money in their own right. In fact, up to this time, all
new forms of money were initially defined in terms of a pre-existing, familiar, monetary
standard. As Milton Friedman and Anna Schwartz explained, there has never been a
“phoenix-like” currency.
Today, economists generally recognize both fiat currencies and highly liquid bank
deposits as money, but of distinct types. Fiat money is called outside money, since it is
imposed on the economy as a direct liability of government; outside money is typically
legal tender. Commercial bank liabilities are termed inside money, since these
instruments are generated by market forces within the financial system. People usually
do not distinguish between the two forms, especially when the inside money is
denominated in the government’s monetary unit of account. However, inside money is a
direct liability of the issuing institution and is only a claim to outside money.
Even though most of the world’s money balances consist of inside money, outside
money provides the ultimate monetary standard to an economy. Monetary authorities can
enhance the quality of inside money both by ensuring that the outside money that backs it
is stable and sound, and by ensuring that the systems that clear and settle payments can
efficiently and reliably exchange the economic values carried by the various monetary
forms. A monetary authority has to be concerned not only about the integrity of its own
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liabilities, but also about the stability and reliability of the financial system issuing claims
to its liabilities. If it is inattentive, the monetary authority may witness financial sector
disruptions that induce real economic loss.
The soundness of financial intermediary institutions, or the efficiency and
reliability of financial (asset) markets, does not necessarily influence the stability of a
currency. Nevertheless, if ex ante concerns about, or ex post responses to, the condition
of financial intermediaries or markets cause monetary authorities to deviate from a
disciplined, sound money policy, then overall financial instability can result.
Adverse real economic effects of shocks to financial intermediaries, or to financial
(asset) markets, are minimized when the monetary authorities continue to provide a stable
monetary unit (currency) throughout any period of unsound financial intermediary
institutions or unstable financial (asset) markets. This means protecting the currency
from deflation as well as inflation.
The Quality of Monetary Services
Economists are accustomed to talk about the quantity of money; I would like to
suggest thinking more deeply about the quality of money. A society will choose to use as
money that form that enables people to gather information and conduct transactions with
the minimum use of resources. Indeed, the worldwide use of the U.S. dollar alongside
local currencies illustrates the point that monies do compete along a quality dimension.
Financial efficiency depends primarily on the stability of money’s purchasing power —
that is, on its exchange value in terms of goods and services. A stable purchasing power
of money does not mean that all prices are constant. Instead, it implies that, while some
money prices will increase and others will fall, on balance, people feel safe in assuming
that the monetary unit will continue to buy essentially the same bundle of goods over
time. It means that concerns about the average value of money will not influence their
economic decisions.
When the purchasing power of money is unstable, price changes do not efficiently
serve their function of providing information about the relative scarcities of goods,
services, and assets. When the public observes that the money prices of virtually
everything are continually rising—a condition referred to as inflation—they will project
this trend to the future and alter their behavior. They will reduce their holdings of money
balances, look for alternative transaction vehicles, and devise alternative methods of
exchange. The quality of the services that the initial forms of money provided then
decays, transaction costs rise, and the benefits of specialization and trade diminish. The
substitutes become more efficient only because the “first-best” money has been debased.
Fiat Money
Today’s national currencies are fiat. The stability of fiat currencies is anchored
only in the public’s faith that their central banks will not issue too much—more than the
public wishes to hold at current prices—and undermine their purchasing power. Since fiat
monies have no intrinsic value, the public’s choice among alternatives rests on the
relative abilities of central banks to invest them with some guarantee of quality. In this
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process, both the public and the central bank may become locked in a peculiar type of
strategic game, a game that now encompasses broader political forces.
For their part, central banks understand the long-term efficiencies that stable
monetary units can provide, but they are also part of a fiscal regime that includes strong
incentives to violate the public’s trust by generating unanticipated inflation. Through
unanticipated expansions of fiat money, central banks can levy an unlegislated tax, reduce
the real value of the government’s outstanding debts, or attempt to exploit a short-term
trade-off between growth and inflation. Governments—particularly those that heavily
discount the future benefits of monetary stability in favor of near-term trade
offs—sometimes instruct or pressure their central banks to issue excessive amounts of
outside money.
Such short-sighted government policies have at most a transitory effect on
economic growth. People respond to these policies by adjusting their money holdings,
altering their price-setting behavior, favoring current consumption over investment, and
purchasing nonproductive assets rather than saving. As people alter their behavior, the
daily costs of conducting exchanges denominated in a particular monetary standard rise.
The additional resources expended on information gathering and on protecting the real
value of wealth would otherwise have been available for growth-enhancing activities.
Research findings confirm the public’s ability to respond in this manner:
Countries with higher inflation rates do not enjoy faster rates of economic growth. To the
contrary, there is mounting evidence that higher inflation rates actually reduce long-term
economic growth. For one thing, high and variable inflation makes it difficult for
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investors to commit to long-term projects. Instead, people in high-inflation countries
tend to channel resources toward hedging and speculating against the uncertain
purchasing power of money.
Governments with a long view typically attempt to insure the quality of their
monetary unit by adopting institutional arrangements—independent central banks, fixed
exchange rates, free international capital movements—that restrict their own monetary
discretion. While some combinations of these can enhance monetary stability, none is
sufficient, since the government that establishes them may alter them at any time in the
future. Even under a gold standard, which theoretically eliminated all opportunities for
monetary policy discretion, governments maintained the option of altering the gold price
of the monetary unit.
The public will ultimately hold that quantity of its officially established money
(both inside and outside money) that minimizes information and transaction costs only if
the central bank develops a reputation for repeatedly defending the purchasing power of
the monetary unit. Certain types of rules, however, can enhance a central bank's
reputation by providing a signal that they—and the governments that establish them—
intend to maintain the quality of the currency. Examples include explicit price-level
targets, or—as in the case of the EMU—legal imperatives to place price stability above
other objectives. Such arrangements may be particularly important because reputations
for price stability build very slowly. Rules that limit discretion enhance price stability
while the central bank’s reputation builds.
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The Fiscal Connection
The performance of fiat national currencies in the twentieth century has been
strongly influenced by the fiscal regime in which the monetary authorities operated. The
reason is that monetary policies have often been used as an alternative fiscal instrument—
a means of financing government spending.
The prospect of a multicountry monetary union presents some interesting
implications for the fiscal authorities of the member nations. For the first time, there will
be a central bank and a fiat currency that are not associated with a single country — at
least until complete political union occurs. Monetary policy decisions will be made at a
supra-national level, while fiscal decisions will remain at national levels.
This arrangement could help promote central bank independence and foster the
primary objective of monetary stability, because it eliminates money creation as an
available means of financing national fiscal deficits. At the same time, this separation
will exert enormous fiscal discipline on participating national governments. Although
seigniorage will continue to be paid to national governments, the level of seigniorage will
no longer be a national decision. Moreover, national governments will no longer be able
to issue their own legal tender and to erode their real outstanding debts through inflation.
In addition, to the extent that labor and capital are mobile across a single market,
more discipline will be imposed on fiscal agents by the monetary arrangements. Absent
the ability to create money, high levels of national debt can be serviced only by higher
future tax receipts. Within the single market, however, the prospects of higher taxes
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would cause the factors of production to migrate. Higher tax rates could, eventually,
actually shrink the tax base.
Although the deficit/output ratios of the potential participants have converged, the
inherited ratios of debt to GDP still vary widely. The diversity of these fiscal positions,
together with many well-publicized structural economic problems in Europe—such as
costly welfare programs and unfunded pensions—suggest the market will not view debt
instruments of various participating countries as perfect substitutes.
This potential divergence creates a unique situation for the central bank in a
monetary union. Once the member countries no longer have a sovereign currency, the
debts of member governments become merely claims to future tax receipts, and there is
no longer the potential for resorting to inflation to ease an individual government’s debt
burden. If the supra-national central bank discriminates among the quality of debt
instruments—for example, only buying the highest rated—the fiscal discipline imposed on
certain countries will intensify.
To the extent that market participants assign different risk premiums to the
obligations of member countries, the national authorities will be in a position similar to
that of state fiscal authorities in the United States. An examination of the U.S. state and
local bond markets suggests that the risk premium rises sharply with the ratio of state
debt to state product. States with high debt-to-output ratios can become effectively
rationed out of the market. To an outsider, it is not clear how a supra-national monetary
authority would discriminate among the debt obligations of individual member nations.
The debt monetization operations of a prudent monetary authority would heighten
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interest-rate differentials among countries with dissimilar fiscal positions. This, however,
could feed back onto the fiscal position of individual countries; that is, divergent debt-
servicing costs would alter the relative fiscal positions of the high-debt nations.
The risk for the fiscal authorities of any member country is that the “dismal
arithmetic” of the budget constraint leaves few palatable alternatives. If the yield on
government securities demanded by markets is above the nominal income growth of the
country, then interest expense on the outstanding debt must become a relatively larger
burden. Nominal income growth has only two components, real growth and inflation, the
latter of which is no longer under the control of a national central bank. So if real growth
of a country, plus any inflation within the monetary union, is less than the average
interest rate on existing debt, one of three things must happen: 1) the fiscal deficits can
increase—but that is not sustainable; 2) tax rates can be raised in an attempt to match
rising total expenditures, or 3) the fraction of the government’s non-interest outlays
(including pensions and other wealth redistributions) must permanently trend downward.1
The political stresses involved in securing a sustainable outcome cannot be assessed in
advance.
Ultimately, the consolidated fiscal positions of all the member countries will
affect confidence in the soundness of the currency. The monetary authority will be
issuing non-interest-bearing liabilities on itself in exchange for the interest-bearing
obligations of member countries. If the collective fiscal position of the individual
1 The necessary conditions for a rising national debt-income ratio are that the real rate of interest exceeds
the economy’s growth rate and that there is a “primary” deficit. A primary deficit occurs when receipts
and outlays, net of interest income and payments, are in deficit.
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countries is questioned in the market, the commitment by the monetary authorities to
maintain a stable currency will be questioned. In the end, the sustainability of any
monetary regime depends on the fiscal regime in which it operates.
Summary
Central banks are successful when households and businesses make decisions
based on the assumption that all observed changes in money prices accurately reflect the
relative scarcities of goods and services in the economy. When this occurs, money is
serving its purpose of reducing the costs of engaging in economic exchange. First and
foremost, a successful central bank must maintain a stable purchasing power of money.
That does not ensure prosperity, but it is a necessary condition for efficient resource
utilization.
The success achieved by the European economies in meeting the convergence
criteria set forth in the Maastricht treaty, along with the strong emphasis on price
stability, provides a promising beginning. The unavoidable discipline required of fiscal
authorities, however, poses unique challenges to operations of the central bank and
ultimately will determine the stability of the currency. How remaining questions about
this unprecedented effort are resolved will have a direct bearing on the standards of living
in Europe in the early decades of the twenty-first century.
Cite this document
APA
Jerry L. Jordan (1997, October 29). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_19971030_jerry_l_jordan
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_19971030_jerry_l_jordan,
author = {Jerry L. Jordan},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {1997},
month = {Oct},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_19971030_jerry_l_jordan},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}