speeches · June 9, 2003
Speech
Donald L. Kohn · Governor
For release on delivery
11:15 a.m. EDT
June 10, 2003
Comment on "Good Policies for Bad Governments: Behavioral Political Economy"
by Daniel J. Benjamin and David I. Laibson
by
Donald L. Kohn*
Member
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
at the
Federal Reserve Bank of Boston's 48th Economic Conference
How Humans Behave--Implications for Economics and Economic Policy
Chatham, Massachusetts
June 10, 2003
* I benefited from conversations with David Wilcox, Ben Bernanke, David Reifschneider, and
Bill Wascher. The views, however, are my own and do not necessarily represent the views of
other members of the Board or its staff.
Introduction
I found the paper by Benjamin and Laibson (B&L) interesting and stimulating.
Naturally, sitting where I do, I have taken the opportunity presented by serving as a discussant
for this paper to think about the possible implications of behavioral economics for my own job-
the conduct of monetary policy. B&L venture a little way into this area--they recommend that
the Federal Reserve set a long-run inflation target well above zero and they recommend greater
attention to survey results in forecasting--but I wonder whether the ideas might have more far
reaching application. So I have chosen not to comment very much on the paper or to pass
judgment on its policy recommendations, but instead to use it as a jumping-off point for raising
questions about the wider implications of nonrational behavior for monetary policy. After I
prepared the first draft of these comments, I looked at the program again and realized the
considerable overlap between my questions and those posed in the introductory paragraph for
this session. You can think of this comment as expanding on those questions in the hope of
pointing the way toward more fruitful research.
Deviations from fully rational optimizing behavior induced by psychological factors have
long been important in macroeconomic analysis and hence in monetary policy. Certainly the
terms "animal spirits" and "irrational exuberance" have been used extensively in macroeconomic
and policy discussions in recent years to characterize these types of behaviors by private agents.
It may be that the framework of behavioral analysis laid out by B&L and others gives us the
tools to look at these and similar phenomena more systematically and to derive from that
analysis implications for the conduct of policy that we cannot derive from more standard ways of
looking at the economy and the effects of policy.
B&L extend the usual scope of analysis by pointing out that policymakers are subject to
the same types of biases and mistakes made by private agents. It took only a few seconds of
introspection to convince me that this subject was worth pursuing, and I will also raise some
questions about its possible import for how monetary policy is made.
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What are the implications of nonrational behavior on the part of private agents?
1. What do these behaviors imply about how aggressive monetary policy should be and
about whether it should pay special attention to asset prices?
If people do such things as overweight the near-term future at the expense of long-term
goals, ignore reversion to the mean, and pay too much attention to recent changes relative to
longer-term levels, they may be likely to overreact to current interest rates and asset prices and
extend recent trends inappropriately. That response would tend to result in increasingly serious
misallocations of resources as interest rates and asset prices strayed further from long-run
fundamentals.
If such behavior were widespread, a major deviation of interest rates from longer-run
equilibrium levels, which might be called for to forcefully counter economic weakness or
inflation, could then have some side effects that needed to be taken into account. Short-sighted
businesses and households would make decisions about investments in houses and capital
equipment based on today's rates, without giving adequate consideration to whether such
investments would seem appropriate at the equilibrium constellation of rates. Compromising
longer-run policy objectives clearly would be destabilizing and counterproductive; but if these
side effects were significant, they might counsel smaller deviations of the funds rate from the
neighborhood of its natural level and a more patient return to longer-run goals than otherwise.
However, other aspects of behavioral economics could send conflicting signals. For example,
the "slow learning" error seems to underline the importance of keeping inflation and inflation
expectations close to whatever level the central bank sees as appropriate over the long run
because any change in expectations could be difficult and costly to reverse.
The picture becomes even more complicated when we consider a broader array of
financial assets. We observe what appears to be a tendency for equity prices, exchange rates,
and other asset prices to overshoot longer-run fundamentals from time to time. Such
overshooting can be derived from models in which asset prices are fully rational, but it could be
accentuated by some of the behaviors identified by B&L. If so and if also, as a consequence of
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those behaviors, resources are even more poorly allocated than a standard model would suggest,
does this strengthen the argument that monetary policy should pay attention to asset prices even
at the expense of shorter-term deviations of output and prices from long-term objectives?
I must admit that even raising these questions makes me uncomfortable. Like most
central bankers, my predilection is to keep monetary policy focused closely on achieving
legislated mandates expeditiously and to limit consideration of resource allocation or asset prices
to their likely effect on macroeconomic stability over the next few years. Asset price bubbles
and resource misallocations are difficult to identify, especially at times of structural change such
as the late 1990s in the United States. Moreover, governments have other policy tools with
which to address some of the potential effects of these distortions, such as the supervision of
banks and securities dealers. But a finding of large and systematic distortions, owing for
example to problems of self-control, would be a new element to weigh in the policy mix, in
particular if they were shown to add to the volatility of output and prices over longer periods.
2. What do nonrational behaviors imply about the price stability goal of monetary
policy?
The authors repeat the familiar argument that resistance to nominal wage reductions
owing to money illusion and nominal loss aversion on the part of workers justifies the settings of
monetary policy in its inflation target appreciably above zero to facilitate employers' ability to
cut real wages. However, the evidence on this point isn't nearly as overwhelming as B&L
suggest. With inflation much lower than the authors' suggestion of 3 percent and continuing to
decline, we're in the midst of a natural experiment. So far at least, real wage increases have not
been markedly higher than would have been predicted based on models fit over periods of more
rapid inflation. And inflation has been coming down somewhat more rapidly than our models
expect given the level of the unemployment rate. Preliminary work by Bill Wascher and Bruce
Fallick on the Board staff using micro data from the Employment Cost Index does show a piling
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up of wage changes at zero each year that affect perhaps an extra 10 to 15 percent of wage
decisions--not a small proportion. However, the spike has become no larger in recent years as
inflation has fallen to quite low levels. In addition, the same work shows only small distortions
to wage-change distributions over periods of four years; apparently by freezing wages for more
than one year, and because productivity rises and negative shocks go away, employers can
achieve reasonable outcomes for wage increases over time and still respect the resistance to
nominal wage declines in any particular year.
Moreover, I wonder whether bounded rationality and money illusion don't actually weigh
more heavily on the side of seeking true price stability over time. Obviously, true price stability
is the only state in which money illusion won't give distorting signals for resource allocation.
Perhaps the difficulty of rationally factoring prospective changes of the price level into decisions
about saving and investment partly fuels the public's strong aversion to inflation. Decisions
about how much to save for a distant event, like retirement, and about how to allocate savings
across financial and real stores of value are greatly complicated by the need to take account of
inflation.
In my view, the main argument for keeping steady-state inflation a little elevated is the
possible constraint that the zero bound on nominal interest rates might place on the central
bank's ability to decrease real interest rates in response to a downward demand shock. To be
sure, as many of my colleagues have been emphasizing, we do have instruments to deal with a
situation in which conventional policy ran out of room; but as they also have emphasized, a first
choice would be to avoid circumstances in which the use of these instruments would be required.
Still, any steady state rate of inflation has costs and benefits, and further analysis of this
consideration using the tools of behavioral economics might be useful.
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3. How should the nonrationality ofp rivate agents be integrated into forecasting?
B&L touch on this subject by advocating the greater use of survey results. I can assure
them that, at the Board, the staff already pays close attention to these surveys and finds them of
some help in predicting near-term developments. We have followed them especially closely
when we are trying to determine whether specific events are likely to trigger changes in spending
behavior, for example after the Gulf wars and the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. We
have not, however, found that they add much of value to predictions based on standard spending
determinants over periods of several quarters or more.
In our forecasts and policy discussions we take account of the full range of information
and possible behavioral responses to explain recent developments and to forecast the economy.
These discussions often focus on anomalies in the economic situation and deviations from
expected paths, frequently giving psychological explanations, such as the animal spirits and
irrational exuberance examples I cited near the beginning of my discussion. I do occasionally
wonder whether, in the absence of more-focused analysis and any quantitative measures of such
behaviors, such an identification is simply relabeling our ignorance. And we often speculate on
the psychology of market participants when we discuss the potential reactions to different paths
for policy. My question is whether behavioral economics can narrow our ignorance and give us
a deeper and more systematic understanding of economic dynamics.
Our formal modeling has already incorporated some insights of this character. For
example, in the course of putting together FRBUS, the Board staff's current large-scale quarterly
econometric model, we quickly decided not to restrict ourselves to just model-consistent
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expectations and instead to allow a variety of mechanisms for individuals to form their
expectations. We have spent a lot of time on attempting to capture sensible descriptions of
learning--what do people know, when do they know it, and how does new information become
embedded in expectations. But much more can probably be done to work in those micro level
insights of behavioral economics that can be shown to have macroeconomic importance. It
stands to reason that, if the types of irrational decisionmaking cited by B&L and others are
widespread, they should affect at least the dynamics of macroeconomic adjustment. Starting
points and recent history, the size and frequency of changes, hyperbolic discounting, and other
such characteristics could impart important nonlinearities and asymmetries to the response of the
economy to monetary policy or other shocks, which, if well understood, could narrow at the
margin our degree of ignorance and uncertainty. Does bounded rationality promote the use of
rules of thumb by households and business, and if so, what is the nature of these rules? Has the
response to the decline in equity wealth we have seen in recent years been shaped in a nonlinear
way by the decline's extraordinary size, or by its following a rapid run-up in wealth, or by the
circumstance that so much of it came to rest in defined-contribution retirement accounts? We
are constantly striving to have our models reflect what people actually do and how they actually
form expectations. How can behavioral economics help in that endeavor?
What are the implications of nonrational behavior on the part of policymakers?
1. What does the potential for such behaviors imply about institutional design?
Elected representatives, recognizing their own "self-control" problem, have created
central banks with a high degree of insulation from short-term political pressures and instructed
them as to their long-run objectives. Such a design should help to address the potential conflict
in the political arena between "patient long-run goals" and "impatient short-run impulses," in the
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phrases of B&L. But as the authors point out, the policymakers could be subject to the same set
of biases. Moreover, when exercising their oversight, politicians are often tempted to emphasize
short-run results over long-term goals. Formally focusing accountability tightly around long-run
goals, like price stability, will help to counter these tendencies in politicians and policymakers,
but it risks short-changing legitimate shorter-run objectives like stabilizing output. Of course, a
considerable literature already addresses the issues of the way to structure central bank
independence and accountability. The question is whether this new wrinkle--the possibility of
inadvertent irrational behaviors by the policymakers--has anything to contribute to the thinking
about these elements of institutional design.
In recent years, when granting central bank independence or restructuring central bank
goals, many countries have given the responsibility for monetary policy to a committee in order
to bring to bear a diversity of views on decisions. The possibility that individual policymakers
would be vulnerable to the same mistakes as private agents seems to strengthen the rationale for
group decisionmaking. Presumably, in a diverse group, some member will be able to point out a
poorly reasoned analysis to the others. Perhaps for this reason the few experimental tests of
group decisionmaking for monetary policy have concluded, contrary to the common wisdom,
that groups perform better than individuals.
But policy committees have evolved with different cultures; for example some, such as
the Federal Reserve, have tended to try to find consensus under the leadership of a chairman;
others, like the Monetary Policy Committee in the United Kingdom, have emphasized individual
accountability. Does behavioral economics or the psychology it is based on have anything to say
about how best to structure groups to enhance the odds of avoiding mistakes of reasoning such as
those highlighted by the authors? Efforts to build consensus would tend to force groups to pay
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greater attention to individuals with contrary reasoning that turns out to be correct, but strong
leadership might imply that some views get more weight than others. Can some of the concepts
regarding organizations discussed in the Gibbons paper earlier at the conference be applied to the
Federal Open Market Committee? Can this literature address the optimal size of the group? As
groups become larger, more viewpoints are represented; but meetings can become unwieldy and
damp the give and take needed to realize the full benefits of diversity.
2. What are the implications of nonrational policymaker analysis for the conduct of
policy itself?
If group decisionmaking does not entirely rule out the possibility of irrationally based
analysis, is policymaker bounded rationality--the inevitably limited understanding of the
economy--another reason to be restrained in the conduct of policy, another reason for
gradualism? Decisionmakers, recognizing that they can't foresee and weigh all the possible
elements in the outlook and responses to policy, may see their own limitations as another form of
Brainard uncertainty and restrict the aggressiveness of their actions. Slow policy responses
could also result from excessive weight on changes relative to levels--for example, mistaking
easing for easy policy. In either case, the risk is that timid policy would allow imbalances to
build and destabilize prices and economic activity. Does behavioral economics have anything to
say about whether the nonrationality of policymakers, if not adequately recognized, has the
potential to impede the efficient conduct of policy? Does it argue for a commitment to more
rule-like behavior, or are the effects of policymaker errors likely to fall mostly on the forecasts
that are likely to play an important role in any such rule?
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Conclusion
Monetary policymakers necessarily operate in the real world, and we are constantly
grappling with issues of how people really act, make decisions, and form expectations. Much of
the attention of the FOMC is taken up with trying to understand the behavior of households and
businesses, especially when their actions do not seem to conform to traditional economic models.
The problems are difficult, but this conference has highlighted a flowering of interest in bringing
new perspectives and a richer understanding to the study of why people do what they do. My
sense is that as yet the application of this study to the issues of most concern to monetary policy
has been limited, but that it has the potential for improving, at least around the margins, our
ability to conduct monetary policy in the public interest. I have tried to throw down the gauntlet,
so-to-speak, to research in these fields by outlining areas I thought might hold some promise. As
a policymaker, and I hope this is not my irrational side coming out, I look forward to realizing
more of the gains from these very interesting approaches to analyzing human behavior.
Cite this document
APA
Donald L. Kohn (2003, June 9). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_20030610_kohn
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_20030610_kohn,
author = {Donald L. Kohn},
title = {Speech},
year = {2003},
month = {Jun},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_20030610_kohn},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}