speeches · October 23, 2003
Speech
Ben S. Bernanke · Governor
For release on delivery
II :20 a.m. EDT (10:20 a.m. CDT)
October 24, 2003
Remarks by
Ben S. Bernanke
Member, Board of Governors ofthe Federal Reserve System
at the
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas Conference
The Legacy of Milton and Rose Friedman's Free to Choose
Dallas Texas
October 24, 2003
It is an honor and a pleasure to have this opportunity, on the anniversary of Milton
and Rose Friedman's popular classic, Free to Choose, to speak on Milton Friedman's
monetary framework and his contributions to the theory and practice of monetary policy.
About a year ago, I also had the honor, at a conference at the University of Chicago in
honor of Milton's ninetieth birthday, to discuss the contribution of Friedman's classic
work with Anna Schwartz, A Monetary History oft he United States (Bemanke, 2002). I
mention this earlier talk not only to indicate that I am ready and willing to praise
Friedman's contributions wherever and whenever anyone will give me a venue, but also
because ofthe critical influence of A Monetary History on both Friedman's own thought
and on the views of a generation of monetary policymakers.
In their Monetary History, Friedman and Schwartz reviewed nearly a century of
American monetary experience in painstaking detail, providing an historical analysis that
demonstrated the importance of monetary forces in the economy far more convincingly
than any purely theoretical or even econometric analysis could ever do. Friedman's close
attention to the lessons of history for economic policy is an aspect of his approach to
economics that I greatly admire. Milton has never been a big fan of government
licensing of professionals, but maybe he would make an exception in the case of
monetary policymakers. With an appropriately designed licensing examination, focused
heavily on the fine details ofthe Monetary History, perhaps we could ensure that
policymakers had at least some of the appreciation of the lessons of history that always
informed Milton Friedman's views on monetary policy.
Today I will pass over Friedman's contributions to our knowledge of monetary
history and focus instead on how his ideas have influenced our understanding both of
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how monetary policy works and how it should be used. That is, 1 will discuss both the
positive and the normative implications of Friedman's thought. The usual disclaimer
applies, that is, 1 speak for myself and not necessarily for my colleagues at the Federal
Reserve.
In preparing this talk, 1 encountered the following problem. Friedman's monetary
framework has been so influential that, in its broad outlines at least, it has nearly become
identical with modem monetary theory and practice. 1 am reminded of the student first
exposed to Shakespeare who complained to the professor: "I don't see what's so great
about him. He was hardly original at all. All he did was string together a bunch of well
known quotations." The same issue arises when one assesses Friedman's contributions.
His thinking has so permeated modem macroeconomics that the worst pitfall in reading
him today is to fail to appreciate the originality and even revolutionary character of his
ideas, in relation to the dominant views at the time that he formulated them.
To illustrate, 1 begin with the descriptive or positive side of Friedman's work on
monetary policy. Here is a short summary of Friedman's own list of eleven key
monetarist propositions, as put forth in the conclusion to his 1970 (note well that date)
lecture, "The Counter-Revolution in Monetary Theory." These propositions are a
reasonable description, 1 believe, of Friedman's basic views on how money affects the
economy. Here they are (in my summary of slightly more detailed language in the
original):
1. There is a consistent though not precise relationship between the rate of
growth of money and the rate of growth of nominal income.
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2. That relationship is not obvious, however, because there is a lag between
money growth and nominal income growth, a lag that itself can be variable.
3. On average, however, the lag between money growth and nominal income
growth is six to nine months.
4. The change in the rate of nominal income growth shows up first in output and
hardly at all in prices.
5. However, with a further lag of six to nine months, the effects of money
growth show up in prices.
6. Again, the empirical relationship is far from perfect.
7. Although money growth can affect output in the short run, in the long run
output is determined strictly by real factors, such as enterprise and thrift.
8. Inflation is always a monetary phenomenon, in the sense that it can be
produced only by money growth more rapid than output. However, there are
many possible sources of money growth.
9. The inflationary impact of government spending depends on its financing.
10. Monetary expansion works by affecting prices of all assets, not just the short
term interest rate.
11. Monetary ease lowers interest rates in the short run but raises them in the long
run.
Let me emphasize again that these propositions reflected Friedman's view as of
some thirty-five years ago. At the time, they were far from being the conventional
wisdom, as suggested by the term "Counter-Revolution" in the essay's title. What do we
make of these propositions today?
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First, the empirical description of the dynamic effects of money on the economy
given in the first six propositions would be viewed by most policymakers and economists
today as being, as the British would put it, "spot on." As a minor illustration of this
point, in my own academic research I contributed to a large modem econometric
literature that has used vector autoregression and other types of time series models to try
to quantify how monetary policy affects the economy. The economic dynamics
estimated by these methods correspond very closely to those outlined in Friedman's
propositions.
These methods confirm that a monetary expansion (for example) leads with a lag
of one to two quarters to an increase in nominal income. Perhaps more importantly, as
Friedman emphasized, the responses of the quantity and price components of nominal
income have distinctly different timing. In particular, as Friedman told us, a monetary
expansion has its more immediate effects on real variables such as output, consumption,
and investment, with the bulk of these effects occurring over two to three quarters. (I was
going to say, as Friedmanfirst told us, but perhaps the credit for that should go to David
Hume. Milton's work is, after all, part of a long and great tradition of classical monetary
analysis.) These real effects tend to dissipate over time, however, so that at a horizon of
twelve to eighteen months the effects of a monetary expansion or contraction are felt
primarily on the rate of inflation. The same patterns have been found in empirical studies
for virtually all countries, not only by vector autoregression analysis but by more
structural methods as well. They are reflected in essentially all contemporary
econometric models used for forecasting and policy analysis, such as the FRBUS model
at the Federal Reserve. The lag between monetary policy changes and the inflation
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response is the reason that modem inflation-targeting central banks, such as the Bank of
England, set a horizon of up to two years for achieving their inflation objectives.
Thus Friedman's description of the economic dynamics set in train by a monetary
expansion or contraction, summarized in his first six propositions, has been largely
validated by modem research. What about the other propositions? Friedman's seventh
point, that money affects real outcomes in the short run but that in the long run output is
determined entirely by real factors, such as enterprise and thrift, is of particular
importance for both theory and policy. The proposition that money has no real effects in
the long run, referred to as the principle of long-run neutrality, is universally accepted
today by monetary economists. When Friedman wrote, however, the conventional view
held that monetary policy could be used to affect real outcomes--for example, to lower
the rate ofunemployment--for an indefinite period. The idea that monetary policy had
long-run effects--or, in technical language, that the Phillips curve relationship between
inflation and unemployment could be exploited in the long run--proved not only wrong
but quite harmful. Attempts to exploit the Phillips curve tradeoff, which persisted despite
Friedman's warnings in his 1968 presidential address to the American Economic
Association, contributed significantly to the Great Inflation of the 19 70s--after the Great
Depression, the second most serious monetary policy mistake of the twentieth century.
The diagnosis of inflation in Friedman's eighth proposition, also controversial
when he wrote, is likewise widely accepted today. Of course, as we all know, Friedman
noted the close connection between inflation and money growth, though carefully
acknowledging that excessive money growth could have many causes. As Milton and
Rose discussed in Chapter 9 of the 1980 edition of Free to Choose, popular views in the
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1960s and 1970s (and even the views of some Federal Reserve officials) held that
inflation could arise from a variety of non-monetary sources, including the power of
unions and corporations and the greediness of oil-producing countries. An unfortunate
implication of these views, whose deficiencies were revealed by bitter experience under
President Nixon, was that wage-price controls and other administrative measures could
successfully address inflation. We understand today that the Great Inflation would
simply not have been possible without the excessively expansionist monetary policies of
the late 1960s and 1970s.
Some of Friedman's descriptive propositions remain the subject of active
research. For example, much research has investigated both theoretically and empirically
the interactions of fiscal policy, monetary policy, and inflation. Friedman's view that
fiscal deficits are inflationary only if they result in money creation, his ninth proposition,
remains broadly accepted, but work by scholars such as Thomas Sargent, Neil Wallace,
and Michael Woodford has shown that these links can be subtle. For example, Sargent
and Wallace's "unpleasant monetarist arithmetic" suggested that a near-term tightening
of monetary policy, by making the long-term fiscal situation less tenable, could (in
principle at least) lead to inflation, because the public will anticipate that the fiscal deficit
must be financed eventually by money creation. More recently, Woodford's fiscal theory
of the price level suggests that nonsustainable fiscal policies can drive inflation, even if
the central bank resists monetization. Following Woodford, Olivier Blanchard has
recently argued that tight money policies in Brazil, by raising the government's financing
costs and thus worsening the fiscal situation, might have had inflationary consequences.
Although this subsequent work has refined our understanding of the relationship between
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monetary and fiscal policy, these analyses are not inconsistent with the spirit of
monetarist propositions, which place the blame for inflation on overissuance of nominal
government liabilities.
Another area of pressing current interest derives from Friedman's tenth
proposition, that monetary policy works by affecting all asset prices, not just the short
term interest rate. This classical monetarist view of the monetary transmission process
has become highly relevant in Japan, for example, where the short-term interest rate has
reached zero, forcing the Bank of Japan to use so-called quantitative easing methods.
The idea behind quantitative easing is that increases in the money stock will raise asset
prices and stimulate the economy, even after the point that the short-term nominal interest
rate has reached zero. There is some evidence that quantitative easing has beneficial
effects (including evidence drawn from the Great Depression by Chris Hanes and others),
but the magnitude of these effects remains an open and hotly debated question.
The only aspect of Friedman's 1970 framework that does not fit entirely with the
current conventional wisdom is the monetarists' use of money growth as the primary
indicator or measure of the stance of monetary policy. Clearly, monetary policy works in
the first instance by affecting the supply of bank reserves and the monetary base.
However, in the financially complex world we live in, money growth rates can be
substantially affected by a range of factors unrelated to monetary policy per se, including
such things as mortgage refinancing activity (in the short run) and the pace of financial
innovation (in the long run). Hence, it would not be safe to conclude (for example) that
the recent decline in M2 is indicative of a tight-money policy by the Fed.
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The imperfect reliability of money growth as an indicator of monetary policy is
unfortunate, because we don't really have anything satisfactory to replace it. As
emphasized by Friedman (in his eleventh proposition) and by Allan Meltzer, nominal
interest rates are not good indicators of the stance of policy, as a high nominal interest
rate can indicate either monetary tightness or ease, depending on the state of inflation
expectations. Indeed, confusing low nominal interest rates with monetary ease was the
source of major problems in the 1930s, and it has perhaps been a problem in Japan in
recent years as well. The real short-term interest rate, another candidate measure of
policy stance, is also imperfect, because it mixes monetary and real influences, such as
the rate of productivity growth. In addition, the value of specific policy indicators can be
affected by the nature of the operating regime employed by the central bank, as shown for
example in empirical work of mine with llian Mihov.
The absence of a clear and straightforward measure of monetary ease or tightness
is a major problem in practice. How can we know, for example, whether policy is
"neutral" or excessively "activist"? I will return to this issue shortly.
Besides describing the effects of money on the economy, Friedman also made
recommendations for monetary policy--the normative part of his framework. I will
discuss just three of the most important of these.
First, Friedman has emphasized the Hippocratic principle for monetary policy:
"First, do no harm." Chapter 9 of Free to Choose contains a famous quote of John Stuart
Mill, as follows: "Like many other kinds of machinery, (money) only exerts a distinct
and independent influence of its own when it gets out of order." On this quote, Milton
and Rose commented: "Perfectly true, as a description of the role of money, provided we
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recognize that society possesses hardly any other contrivance that can do more damage
when it gets out of order."
Friedman's emphasis on avoiding monetary disruptions arose, like many of his
other ideas, from his study of U.S. monetary history. He had observed that, in many
episodes, the actions of the monetary authorities, despite possibly good intentions,
actively destabilized the economy. The leading case, of course, was the Great
Depression, or as Friedman and Schwartz called it, the Great Contraction, in which the
Fed's tightening in the late 1920s and (most importantly) its failure to prevent the bank
failures of the early 1930s were a major cause of the massive decline in money, prices,
and output. It is likely that Friedman's study ofthe Depression led him to look for
means, such as his proposal for constant money growth, to ensure that the monetary
machine did not get out of order. I hope, though of course I cannot be certain, that two
decades of relative monetary stability have not led contemporary central bankers to forget
the basic Hippocratic principle.
A second normative recommendation, worth recalling here, was Friedman's
preference for floating rather than fixed exchange rates. At times, at least in popular
writing, Friedman rationalized this position as following from free market principles.
This argument is a bit disingenuous, I think, as a fixed nominal exchange rate is just one
method of anchoring the aggregate price level and is perfectly consistent with free
adjustment of the relative prices of goods and services. In a more serious vein, Friedman
understood that, in a world in which monetary policymakers put domestic economic
stability above balance of payments considerations, a fixed exchange rate system is likely
to be unstable during periods of economic stress. He saw that this was the case during
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the 1930s, when the world was on a modified gold standard called the gold exchange
standard, and it was likewise the case under the postwar Bretton Woods system. To
reconcile a fixed exchange rate and an emphasis on domestic stability, policymakers must
impose capital controls or restrictions on trade, which have undesirable effects on
economic efficiency.
If policymakers' first priority is stability of the domestic economy, Friedman
reasoned, then why not adopt a system--namely, flexible exchange rates--that provides
the necessary monetary independence without restrictions on the flow of capital or
goods? When Friedman wrote about fixed and flexible exchange rates, a switch from the
Bretton Woods fixed-exchange-rate system to a floating-rate system seemed quite
unlikely. In this, as in many other matters, he was prescient, as the major currencies have
now been successfully floating since the breakup of the Bretton Woods system in the
early 1970s.
These two recommendations have had major effects on institutional design and
policy practice. However, in my view, the most fundamental policy recommendation put
forth by Milton Friedman is the injunction to policymakers to provide a stable monetary
background for the economy. I take this to be a stronger statement than the Hippocratic
injunction to avoid major disasters; rather, there is a positive argument here that monetary
stability actively promotes efficiency and growth. (Hence Friedman's suggestion that the
long-run Phillips curve, rather than vertical, might be positively sloped.) Also implicit in
Friedman's focus on nominal stability is the view that central banks should avoid
excessively ambitious attempts to manage the real economy, which in practice may
exacerbate both nominal and real volatility. In Friedman's classic 1960 work, A Program
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for Monetary Stability, he suggested that monetary stability might be attained by literally
keeping money stable: that is, by fixing the rate of growth of a specific monetary
aggregate and forswearing the use of monetary policy to "fine-tune" the economy.
Do contemporary monetary policymakers provide the nominal stability
recommended by Friedman? The answer to this question is not entirely straightforward.
As I discussed earlier, for reasons of financial innovation and institutional change, the
rate of money growth does not seem to be an adequate measure of the stance of monetary
policy, and hence a stable monetary background for the economy cannot necessarily be
identified with stable money growth. Nor are there other instruments of monetary policy
whose behavior can be used unambiguously to judge this issue, as I have already noted.
In particular, the fact that the Federal Reserve and other central banks actively manipulate
their instrument interest rates is not necessarily inconsistent with their providing a stable
monetary background, as that manipulation might be necessary to offset shocks that
would otherwise endanger nominal stability.
Ultimately, it appears, one can check to see if an economy has a stable monetary
background only by looking at macroeconomic indicators such as nominal GDP growth
and inflation. On this criterion it appears that modem central bankers have taken Milton
Friedman's advice to heart. Over the past two decades, inflation has fallen sharply and
stabilized around the world, not only in the industrialized nations but in emerging-market
economies and in even the poorest developing nations. Some central banks, so-called
inflation targeters, have set explicit, quantitative targets for inflation; but all central
banks, certainly including the Federal Reserve, have emphasized the importance of
achieving and maintaining price stability. On the issue of inflation control, Friedman
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may be judged to have been a bit too pessimistic; his concerns that central banks would
have neither the technical ability nor the correct incentives to control inflation led him to
recommend his money-growth rule, for which a central bank could certainly be held
accountable. Evidently, however, determined central banks can stabilize inflation
directly, at least they have been able to do so thus far.
However, on the benefits of monetary stability, or as I would prefer to say,
nominal stability, Friedman was not wrong. Many theories popular even today might
lead one to conclude that increased stability in inflation could be purchased only at the
cost of reduced stability in output and employment. In fact, over the past two decades,
increased inflation stability has been associated with marked increases in the stability of
output and employment as well, both in the United States and elsewhere.
It has been argued that a lower incidence of exogenous shocks explains these
favorable developments, and that may be part of the story. But I believe that there is an
important causal relationship as well. For example, low and stable inflation has not only
promoted growth and productivity, but it has also reduced the sensitivity of the economy
to shocks. One important mechanism has been the anchoring of inflation expectations.
When the public is confident that the central bank will maintain low and stable inflation,
shocks such as sharp increases in oil prices or large exchange rate movements tend to
have at most transitory price-level effects and do not result in sustained inflationary
surges. In contrast, when inflation expectations are poorly anchored, as was the case in
the 1970s, shocks of these types can destabilize inflation expectations, increasing the
inflationary impact and leading to greater volatility in both inflation and output.
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In summary, one can hardly overstate the influence of Friedman's monetary
framework on contemporary monetary theory and practice. He identified the key
empirical facts and he provided us with broad policy recommendations, notably the
emphasis on nominal stability, that have served us well. For these contributions, both
policymakers and the public owe Milton Friedman an enormous debt.
Cite this document
APA
Ben S. Bernanke (2003, October 23). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_20031024_bernanke
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_20031024_bernanke,
author = {Ben S. Bernanke},
title = {Speech},
year = {2003},
month = {Oct},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_20031024_bernanke},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}