April 2, 2006

  • The Friant Dam east of Fresno has been diverting 95 percent of the San Joaquin River water to California agriculture since it was built in 1944.

    Rick E. Martin / Mercury News

    The Friant Dam east of Fresno has been diverting 95 percent of the San Joaquin River water to California agriculture since it was built in 1944.


     


    Rebirth of a river

    Some wait with delight, others with dread for new divvying up of San Joaquin River water


    Mercury News


    As a boy in the 1940s, Walt Shubin built a canoe and paddled the San Joaquin River. He camped on its banks, caught 30-pound salmon and spent countless hours exploring its bends and turns.


    ``To me, it was a national treasure,'' said Shubin, now 75. ``Next to Yosemite it was the most beautiful thing I had ever seen.''


    That world ended in 1944 when the federal government built Friant Dam and diverted 95 percent of the river's waters to farmers from Fresno to Bakersfield.


    Today that water nourishes a million acres in America's top agricultural region. But California's second-longest river is polluted, stripped of salmon. Its decline has degraded water supplies from Silicon Valley to Los Angeles. In many stretches, like the one Shubin walked recently near Los Banos, it is bone-dry.


    Yet, like spring, the river has a chance to begin anew.


    In a historic legal settlement expected this month, environmentalists, farmers and federal water officials say they will unveil an agreement to release billions of gallons of water back into the San Joaquin.


    The settlement is expected to bring widespread changes, from increasing the number of fish in San Francisco Bay to improving drinking water quality.


    ``There should be Sierra snowmelt flowing into the delta, and instead there is polluted farm runoff. Which would you rather drink?'' said Barry Nelson, a senior policy analyst at the Natural Resources Defense Council in San Francisco.


    The settlement ends an 18-year legal battle that began when NRDC and other environmental and fishing groups sued the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, which operates Friant Dam. In 2004, they won a court ruling requiring enough water to be put back into the river to restore fish.


    For farmers, the ruling was a political shock wave that some say threatens their very existence. Others see it as a once-in-a-lifetime chance to restore balance.


    ``I don't know of any project to restore a major river and a major salmon run like this anywhere in the West,'' said Peter Moyle, a fisheries biologist with the University of California-Davis.


    ``This is a river that has been dried up in long stretches for 60 years. It can literally be brought back to life again.''


    Restoration will require an estimated $650 million to rebuild levees, plant trees and remove barriers on 100 miles of river from Fresno to Merced. That work could take a decade, although Moyle predicted salmon will return in two or three years once water flow increases.


    There are precedents: In 1996, the Solano County Water Agency agreed to put water back into 22 miles of Putah Creek near Davis. Salmon came back the first year. Native plants and trees grew. Songbirds returned. Community groups began cleaning up the creek, and school children studied it.


    ``Suddenly the creek has become an asset,'' Moyle said, ``when before it was a place full of dirty water where you didn't want your kids to play.''


    Huge projects
    • California trying to turn back clock


    The San Joaquin is not the only California river to be massively re-engineered.


    Much of the Golden State receives only about 15 inches of rain a year -- the same as Morocco -- and couldn't have grown without some of the most ambitious water projects ever built in the United States.


    Nearly a century ago, San Francisco submerged scenic Hetch Hetchy Valley in Yosemite National Park to expand its water supply. And Los Angeles built a canal 220 miles through the desert, draining much of the Owens River.


    The San Joaquin's story is similar: Friant Dam diverted so much water that the river dries up completely for 20 to 70 miles downstream in most years.


    Now it will be the first major river in California where society attempts to turn back the clock on a huge scale, even if not all the way.


    The river runs 350 miles. It begins as melting snow at 13,000 feet near Mount Ritter in the Sierra south of Yosemite. Tumbling through waterfalls and granite canyons, it historically flowed into the San Joaquin Valley, meandering north past present-day Modesto to empty into the delta near Stockton.


    The river was so wide and deep that steamboats plied it from San Francisco to Fresno in the 1870s.


    But everything changed in the 1930s when growers between Fresno and Bakersfield suffered a major drought. Wells ran dry; thousands of families faced bankruptcy. When the state's attempt at a water project stalled, President Franklin Roosevelt approved construction of the Central Valley Project, a vast system of dams and canals to move water 500 miles from Northern California rivers to farms and cities.


    The two linchpins were Shasta Dam, near Redding, and Friant Dam, near Fresno.


    When Friant was finished and the spigots opened, farm towns all across the San Joaquin Valley celebrated.


    ``It was a very big deal,'' said Harvey Bailey, a farmer who owns 1,100 acres of orange groves with his brother, Lee, in tiny Orange Cove, 30 miles east of Fresno. ``There was a parade, with horses and floats.''


    Bailey, 11 years old at the time, remembers how his parents took him to the ribbon-cutting and how the farm economy boomed.


    Today, the region produces more oranges than any place in California. Bailey's are such high quality he sells them to Japan, Korea, even Florida.


    Outside the town of 8,000 people, neat rows of orange trees, thick with glistening fruit like a scene from a Steinbeck-era packing crate label, stretch for miles. Snow-capped peaks in Kings Canyon National Park dot the horizon.


    Bailey's family has farmed in Orange Cove since 1910. Virtually all the town's water -- and its jobs -- rely on San Joaquin River diversions.


    In August, 2004, when U.S. District Court Judge Lawrence Karlton of Sacramento ruled that state law requires Friant Dam to release enough water to restore salmon, a sense of dread gripped Orange Cove and dozens of other little towns.


    ``That ruling grabbed the valley's attention,'' said Ron Jacobsma, general manager of the Friant Water Users Authority, a group of 22 irrigation districts representing 15,000 farmers who depend on the river's water. ``People were very concerned it could result in a large loss of water to our region, and over time we'd end up back where we were in the 1930s.''


    After the judge threatened to decide how much water should go back into the river, farmers, environmentalists and Bureau of Reclamation officials began settlement talks. Details are secret, but some reports say 200,000 acre-feet a year will be restored. That's nearly 15 percent of the river's average flow -- enough for 1 million people's needs a year. And it's enough to bring back several thousand salmon in a decade, said Moyle of UC-Davis.


    Orange farmers like Bailey say they'll try to get by with less. Bailey is installing drip irrigation at $1,500 an acre. He hopes to buy water from other districts. But he worries.


    ``We've got competition from Spain, Australia, South America,'' he said, ``and their costs are lower.''


    The farmers find themselves at a crossroads of changing values. When FDR dried up the river to save farm families, California had no Silicon Valley and little tourism. Agriculture was king. Today, the public demands wildlife restoration and high-quality drinking water.


    ``This water developed a whole economy,'' said Bailey. ``The benefits far outweighed the downside. People are part of the environment, too. We've got just as much right to be here as the fish do.''


    Nearly 200 miles north in Silicon Valley, the fate of the San Joaquin River has a direct impact on the drinking water of nearly 2 million people.


    The Santa Clara Valley Water District draws half its water from the delta, half from local wells. With most of the San Joaquin's water rerouted to farms, the delta has become unnaturally salty, particularly in summer.


    Meanwhile, pesticides, manure and fertilizers from fields along Interstate 5 drain into the river. Bill Sweeney, the former California director of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, in a famous 1984 speech called the San Joaquin River ``the lower colon of California -- a stinking sewer.''


    Rainfall, and water flowing into the river from tributaries, wash it all into the delta. Meanwhile, delta water is delivered to San Jose drinking water treatment plants through the South Bay Aqueduct.


    Although San Jose's drinking water meets all public health standards, the Santa Clara Valley Water District spends millions treating it to remove contaminants. Of particular concern are trihalomethanes, substances formed when chlorine disinfectants react with decaying organic matter, such as leaves and peat. Studies have linked trihalomethanes to higher rates of miscarriage and cancer risk.


    Although the water district has not violated any state or federal drinking water standards since 1990, it has come close in a few years, and now is spending $251 million for a high-tech ozone system to produce even cleaner water.


    Restoring the San Joaquin ``is an upside for us,'' said Walt Wadlow, chief operating officer of the water utility for the district.


    ``The higher the quality of water you start with, the better the quality of the water you can deliver.''


    River's ugly fate
    • Sewage, trash, pollutants flow in


    Near the San Joaquin River's end at Stockton, where water from tributaries flows in, the river revives. But it's not a pretty sight.


    The air smells pungent from a nearby sewage plant. A meandering series of wetlands 150 years ago, the San Joaquin is narrowed now by barren levees of dirt and broken concrete. One bank is littered with old clothes, empty paint cans, a broken microwave oven and a car half-submerged in the brown-green water.


    Veterinarian Carrie McNeil spends her days testing delta water as director of Deltakeeper, a Stockton environmental group.


    ``That's horrible,'' McNeil said, drifting by in a boat last week. ``There are places like this all over. The spirit of some of our rivers, the way they begin up in the Sierras -- it's just sad to see how they end up.''


    Apart from the trash, the San Joaquin is classified under the Clean Water Act as impaired because of high levels of pollutants, including two types of pesticides and mercury from old Sierra mines.


    ``It's a chemical soup,'' McNeil said.


    Everyone agrees there's a lot of work ahead to nurse the San Joaquin back to health. In the 21st century, the river has to maintain farm towns, restore fish and provide cleaner drinking water.


    ``We view this as historically precedent-setting if we can work it out,'' Jacobsma said. ``You have parties that have been at each other's throats for 18 years. For them to come together and find common ground that hopefully will meet everyone's goals is something you don't see every day.''


     


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March 30, 2006


  • The Debt To the Penny

    Current           Amount

    03/29/2006 $8,367,661,575,867.99

    Current
    Month

    03/28/2006 $8,368,398,006,564.24
    03/27/2006 $8,364,819,728,913.06
    03/24/2006 $8,364,078,118,387.21
    03/23/2006 $8,363,536,754,922.14
    03/22/2006 $8,347,486,113,319.40
    03/21/2006 $8,351,722,841,145.07
    03/20/2006 $8,348,224,303,886.34
    03/17/2006 $8,270,880,983,362.78
    03/16/2006 $8,271,005,203,336.67
    03/15/2006 $8,270,134,498,375.29
    03/14/2006 $8,270,260,017,805.93
    03/13/2006 $8,270,385,415,129.52
    03/10/2006 $8,270,763,143,272.32
    03/09/2006 $8,270,889,116,189.68
    03/08/2006 $8,270,020,560,975.99
    03/07/2006 $8,270,137,961,985.81
    03/06/2006 $8,270,260,474,453.58
    03/03/2006 $8,270,568,938,276.67
    03/02/2006 $8,270,651,337,575.14
    03/01/2006 $8,269,768,312,946.41

    Prior
    Months

    02/28/2006 $8,269,885,515,386.04
    01/31/2006 $8,196,070,437,599.52
    12/30/2005 $8,170,424,541,313.62
    11/30/2005 $8,092,322,205,720.65
    10/31/2005 $8,027,123,404,214.36

    Prior Fiscal
    Years

    09/30/2005 $7,932,709,661,723.50
    09/30/2004 $7,379,052,696,330.32
    09/30/2003 $6,783,231,062,743.62
    09/30/2002 $6,228,235,965,597.16
    09/28/2001 $5,807,463,412,200.06
    09/29/2000 $5,674,178,209,886.86
    09/30/1999 $5,656,270,901,615.43
    09/30/1998 $5,526,193,008,897.62
    09/30/1997 $5,413,146,011,397.34
    09/30/1996 $5,224,810,939,135.73
    09/29/1995 $4,973,982,900,709.39
    09/30/1994 $4,692,749,910,013.32
    09/30/1993 $4,411,488,883,139.38
    09/30/1992 $4,064,620,655,521.66
    09/30/1991 $3,665,303,351,697.03
    09/28/1990 $3,233,313,451,777.25
    09/29/1989 $2,857,430,960,187.32
    09/30/1988 $2,602,337,712,041.16
    09/30/1987 $2,350,276,890,953.00

    SOURCE: BUREAU OF THE PUBLIC DEBT


    Looking for more historical information? Visit the Debt
    Historical Information archives.


     


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  •  


    The Atlantic Monthly


    Atlantic Unbound | April 4, 2001
     
    Politics & Prose | by Jack Beatty
     
    Hitler's Willing Business PartnersA shocking account of IBM's complicity with the Nazis is a reminder that people bear moral responsibility for the actions of the corporations, a point that critics have failed to grasp.


    .....



    Y ou are Thomas Watson, the founder of IBM, and you face a choice. Hitler has just come to power in Germany, and you are considering whether to direct your German subsidiary, Dehomag, to bid for the job of tabulating the results of a census the Nazi government wants to conduct. While you are making up your mind in your New York office, the local papers swell with stories of anti-Semitic outrages committed by that government. On March 18, 1933, The New York Times reports that the Nazis have ousted all Jewish professionals—lawyers, doctors, teachers—from their jobs. A front-page story under the headline "German Fugitives Tell of Atrocities at Hands of Nazis" describes Brown Shirts dragging Jews out of a Berlin restaurant and forcing them to run a gauntlet of kicks and blows such that the face of the last man through "resembled a beefsteak." Other stories tell of Jews being forced to clean the streets with toothbrushes, of book burnings, of 10,000 refugees fleeing Germany, and of 30,000 people—Jews, political prisoners, gays, and others—imprisoned in concentration camps. On March 27, virtually outside your window on Broadway, a crowd of more than 50,000 at a Madison Square Garden mass rally demands that American firms boycott Nazi Germany. In these circumstances, with this knowledge, will you, Thomas Watson, bid for the census contract?







    You are Thomas Watson, it is 1937, and you must know that the census and other work your German branch has performed for the Nazis has been used not just to count cars and cows but to identify Jews. Perhaps you have even read the comment of a Nazi statistician that "In using statistics the government now has the road map to switch from knowledge to deeds." You have visited Germany; you were in Berlin in July, 1935, when Black Shirts rampaged through the streets smashing the windows of Jewish stores, and forcing your friends, the Wertheims, to sell their department store for "next to nothing" and escape to Sweden. You have seen the broken windows, you have taken tea with a German official at a fine home that he told you was once the property of a Jew who had fled Germany, and now, in recognition of your services to the Third Reich, Hitler wants to give you a medal. Will you accept it? You are Thomas Watson, it is 1940, and Hitler has invaded France. Now comes another choice: executives of your German subsidiary want you to sell out to German principals. With Hitler moving to occupy all of Europe, this is a chance for a clean break. True, the United States is not yet in the war, but Hitler's bombs are falling on London. Disengagement would be politic. Will you sell out or fight to hold on to Dehomag?


    T homas Watson chose to tabulate the Nazi census, to accept Hitler's medal, and to fight for control of Dehomag. And he made other equally indefensible choices in his years of doing a profitable business counting Jews for Hitler—choices that are described in IBM and the Holocaust by Edwin Black. This is a shocking book, even if its subtitle, "The Strategic Alliance Between Nazi Germany and America's Most Powerful Corporation," is hyperbolic and misleading. (IBM was hardly America's most powerful company in the 1930s and 1940s; General Motors was, and it too did business with the Third Reich, though you could be forgiven for getting the impression from Mr. Black that IBM was alone in this unrighteous commerce.) IBM was a New Deal company that famously strove to avoid laying off its work force during the Depression. Watson was a friend of President and Mrs. Roosevelt's. IBM helped crack the German intelligence code. It had a good war. Yet, with the help of more than a hundred researchers working in archives in the U.S., Britain, Germany, France, and Israel, Edwin Black has documented a sordid relationship between this great American company and the Third Reich, one that extended into the war years.


    The Holocaust, Black stipulates, would have occurred with or without the Hollerith tabulating machines and punch cards IBM/Dehomag leased to the Nazis. But he raises the important if ultimately unanswerable question of whether Hitler's destruction of the Jews would have happened as rapidly and claimed as many victims without the harvest of deadly information recorded by the Hollerith machines, on IBM punch cards, by IBM/Dehomag employees working for the Nazi death bureaucracy. On the efficiency question, he provocatively contrasts Holland and France. The Nazis ordered censuses in both countries soon after they were occupied. In Holland, a country with "a well-entrenched Hollerith infrastructure," out of "an estimated 140,000 Dutch Jews, more than 107,000 were deported, and of those 102,000 were murdered—a death ratio of approximately 73 percent." In France, where the "punch card infrastructure was in complete disarray," of the estimated 300,000 to 350,000 Jews in both German-occupied and Vichy zones, 85,000 were deported, of whom around 3,000 survived. "The death ratio for France was approximately 25 percent."


    Black gives evidence to qualify the implied claim that the Hollerith technology made the decisive difference. In Holland the Nazis installed a zealous bureaucrat to take the census. France had a moral hero in charge who frustrated German efforts to find Jews—and paid with his life. Holland had a long and innocent tradition of recording religion on all manner of official documents. France "lacked a tradition of census taking that identified religion." The historian has to provide the material to unmake his case in order to be true to the shagginess of history. In this example, Black passes the test of historical candor. His passion (his parents are Holocaust survivors) overmasters him elsewhere, however, and rhetorical claims—"eventually, every Nazi combat order, bullet and troop movement was tracked on an IBM punch card system"—leave him open to critics like the one writing in The New York Times who complained that Black "often tells his story not in the subtle hues of scholarship but in the Day-Glo paint of the potboiler."


    I  have read four other negative reviews of this book, and they all share what to me is a surprising feature: they are more critical of Edwin Black (with The Times pointing out that he has written for Redbook magazine and another reviewer that he is not a college graduate) who wrote a book, than of Thomas Watson, who made the damnable choices recorded in that book. And several of the reviews reveal depressingly low expectations of the corporation. In Business Week Peter Hayes, a Holocaust historian, calls the book a "deplorable publication" and musters several arguments against it, of which I will mention only one. "Unless Watson was prepared to write off his assets in Germany," Hayes writes, "in which case his operation would remain there for Hitler to exploit," he had no choice but to do business with the Nazis, and even to accept Hitler's medal, to stay on their good side. But, according to Black, "Holleriths could not function without IBM's unique paper. Watson controlled the paper.... Holleriths could not function without cards. Watson controlled the cards.... Hollerith systems could not function without machines and spare parts. Watson controlled the machines and spare parts." That passage refers to the situation in 1940, when the Nazis had long since become dependent on their single-source supplier. Perhaps Hitler could have taken over Watson's "operation" years earlier. And suppose Hitler had, shouldn't Watson have been willing to write his assets off? He could have justified that step to his stockholders on the strongest moral grounds in all history. And remember: he was not selling widgets to the Nazis but a product that could patently further the proclaimed racialist aims of the regime (The Times ran anti-Semitic selections from Mein Kampf on its front page within months of Hitler's taking control of the government). That information is power was and remains the theory of IBM's business. Black's question "How did they get the names?" indicates the maleficent use to which the power of information was put.







    Writing in The Wall Street Journal, my friend Geoffrey Wheatcroft, the author of The Controversy of Zion, advances an exculpatory logic one can readily imagine Watson himself hiding behind. "The capitalist free market is indeed amoral," he writes. "It is an efficient system for investment and production but cannot achieve moral aims itself. In this it resembles its physical technology. A hypodermic syringe can be used to inject cyanide or penicillin. It is not an independent moral agent." But prior to the market is the corporation, led by human beings who cannot escape responsibility for its actions. Prior to technology are the "independent moral agents" who made it—syringes and tabulating machines don't drop from heaven. And prior to the corporation—to continue our movement away from the market to the persons seeking to enter it—are the owners, the stockholders. Black says not a word about IBM's stockholders, who bear a diffuse yet inescapable responsibility for what Thomas Watson did in their name. There is a kind of market determinism in the air, which easily meshes with the techno-determinism of unconsidered speech, a tendency to treat the Market as the Marxists treat History—as a force overriding human choice and responsibility. There is no such thing as "business ethics," Peter Drucker has pertinently observed, only ethics.



    The URL for this page is http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200104u/pp2001-04-04.


     


     

March 28, 2006









  • Remarks by Governor Ben S. Bernanke
    Before the National Economists Club, Washington, D.C.
    November 21, 2002

    Deflation: Making Sure "It" Doesn't Happen Here







    Since World War II, inflation--the apparently inexorable rise in the prices of goods and services--has been the bane of central bankers. Economists of various stripes have argued that inflation is the inevitable result of (pick your favorite) the abandonment of metallic monetary standards, a lack of fiscal discipline, shocks to the price of oil and other commodities, struggles over the distribution of income, excessive money creation, self-confirming inflation expectations, an "inflation bias" in the policies of central banks, and still others. Despite widespread "inflation pessimism," however, during the 1980s and 1990s most industrial-country central banks were able to cage, if not entirely tame, the inflation dragon. Although a number of factors converged to make this happy outcome possible, an essential element was the heightened understanding by central bankers and, equally as important, by political leaders and the public at large of the very high costs of allowing the economy to stray too far from price stability.

    With inflation rates now quite low in the United States, however, some have expressed concern that we may soon face a new problem--the danger of deflation, or falling prices. That this concern is not purely hypothetical is brought home to us whenever we read newspaper reports about Japan, where what seems to be a relatively moderate deflation--a decline in consumer prices of about 1 percent per year--has been associated with years of painfully slow growth, rising joblessness, and apparently intractable financial problems in the banking and corporate sectors. While it is difficult to sort out cause from effect, the consensus view is that deflation has been an important negative factor in the Japanese slump.

    So, is deflation a threat to the economic health of the United States? Not to leave you in suspense, I believe that the chance of significant deflation in the United States in the foreseeable future is extremely small, for two principal reasons. The first is the resilience and structural stability of the U.S. economy itself. Over the years, the U.S. economy has shown a remarkable ability to absorb shocks of all kinds, to recover, and to continue to grow. Flexible and efficient markets for labor and capital, an entrepreneurial tradition, and a general willingness to tolerate and even embrace technological and economic change all contribute to this resiliency. A particularly important protective factor in the current environment is the strength of our financial system: Despite the adverse shocks of the past year, our banking system remains healthy and well-regulated, and firm and household balance sheets are for the most part in good shape. Also helpful is that inflation has recently been not only low but quite stable, with one result being that inflation expectations seem well anchored. For example, according to the University of Michigan survey that underlies the index of consumer sentiment, the median expected rate of inflation during the next five to ten years among those interviewed was 2.9 percent in October 2002, as compared with 2.7 percent a year earlier and 3.0 percent two years earlier--a stable record indeed.

    The second bulwark against deflation in the United States, and the one that will be the focus of my remarks today, is the Federal Reserve System itself. The Congress has given the Fed the responsibility of preserving price stability (among other objectives), which most definitely implies avoiding deflation as well as inflation. I am confident that the Fed would take whatever means necessary to prevent significant deflation in the United States and, moreover, that the U.S. central bank, in cooperation with other parts of the government as needed, has sufficient policy instruments to ensure that any deflation that might occur would be both mild and brief.

    Of course, we must take care lest confidence become over-confidence. Deflationary episodes are rare, and generalization about them is difficult. Indeed, a recent Federal Reserve study of the Japanese experience concluded that the deflation there was almost entirely unexpected, by both foreign and Japanese observers alike (Ahearne et al., 2002). So, having said that deflation in the United States is highly unlikely, I would be imprudent to rule out the possibility altogether. Accordingly, I want to turn to a further exploration of the causes of deflation, its economic effects, and the policy instruments that can be deployed against it. Before going further I should say that my comments today reflect my own views only and are not necessarily those of my colleagues on the Board of Governors or the Federal Open Market Committee.

    Deflation: Its Causes and Effects
    Deflation is defined as a general decline in prices, with emphasis on the word "general." At any given time, especially in a low-inflation economy like that of our recent experience, prices of some goods and services will be falling. Price declines in a specific sector may occur because productivity is rising and costs are falling more quickly in that sector than elsewhere or because the demand for the output of that sector is weak relative to the demand for other goods and services. Sector-specific price declines, uncomfortable as they may be for producers in that sector, are generally not a problem for the economy as a whole and do not constitute deflation. Deflation per se occurs only when price declines are so widespread that broad-based indexes of prices, such as the consumer price index, register ongoing declines.

    The sources of deflation are not a mystery. Deflation is in almost all cases a side effect of a collapse of aggregate demand--a drop in spending so severe that producers must cut prices on an ongoing basis in order to find buyers.1 Likewise, the economic effects of a deflationary episode, for the most part, are similar to those of any other sharp decline in aggregate spending--namely, recession, rising unemployment, and financial stress.

    However, a deflationary recession may differ in one respect from "normal" recessions in which the inflation rate is at least modestly positive: Deflation of sufficient magnitude may result in the nominal interest rate declining to zero or very close to zero.2 Once the nominal interest rate is at zero, no further downward adjustment in the rate can occur, since lenders generally will not accept a negative nominal interest rate when it is possible instead to hold cash. At this point, the nominal interest rate is said to have hit the "zero bound."

    Deflation great enough to bring the nominal interest rate close to zero poses special problems for the economy and for policy. First, when the nominal interest rate has been reduced to zero, the real interest rate paid by borrowers equals the expected rate of deflation, however large that may be.3 To take what might seem like an extreme example (though in fact it occurred in the United States in the early 1930s), suppose that deflation is proceeding at a clip of 10 percent per year. Then someone who borrows for a year at a nominal interest rate of zero actually faces a 10 percent real cost of funds, as the loan must be repaid in dollars whose purchasing power is 10 percent greater than that of the dollars borrowed originally. In a period of sufficiently severe deflation, the real cost of borrowing becomes prohibitive. Capital investment, purchases of new homes, and other types of spending decline accordingly, worsening the economic downturn.

    Although deflation and the zero bound on nominal interest rates create a significant problem for those seeking to borrow, they impose an even greater burden on households and firms that had accumulated substantial debt before the onset of the deflation. This burden arises because, even if debtors are able to refinance their existing obligations at low nominal interest rates, with prices falling they must still repay the principal in dollars of increasing (perhaps rapidly increasing) real value. When William Jennings Bryan made his famous "cross of gold" speech in his 1896 presidential campaign, he was speaking on behalf of heavily mortgaged farmers whose debt burdens were growing ever larger in real terms, the result of a sustained deflation that followed America's post-Civil-War return to the gold standard.4 The financial distress of debtors can, in turn, increase the fragility of the nation's financial system--for example, by leading to a rapid increase in the share of bank loans that are delinquent or in default. Japan in recent years has certainly faced the problem of "debt-deflation"--the deflation-induced, ever-increasing real value of debts. Closer to home, massive financial problems, including defaults, bankruptcies, and bank failures, were endemic in America's worst encounter with deflation, in the years 1930-33--a period in which (as I mentioned) the U.S. price level fell about 10 percent per year.

    Beyond its adverse effects in financial markets and on borrowers, the zero bound on the nominal interest rate raises another concern--the limitation that it places on conventional monetary policy. Under normal conditions, the Fed and most other central banks implement policy by setting a target for a short-term interest rate--the overnight federal funds rate in the United States--and enforcing that target by buying and selling securities in open capital markets. When the short-term interest rate hits zero, the central bank can no longer ease policy by lowering its usual interest-rate target.5

    Because central banks conventionally conduct monetary policy by manipulating the short-term nominal interest rate, some observers have concluded that when that key rate stands at or near zero, the central bank has "run out of ammunition"--that is, it no longer has the power to expand aggregate demand and hence economic activity. It is true that once the policy rate has been driven down to zero, a central bank can no longer use its traditional means of stimulating aggregate demand and thus will be operating in less familiar territory. The central bank's inability to use its traditional methods may complicate the policymaking process and introduce uncertainty in the size and timing of the economy's response to policy actions. Hence I agree that the situation is one to be avoided if possible.

    However, a principal message of my talk today is that a central bank whose accustomed policy rate has been forced down to zero has most definitely not run out of ammunition. As I will discuss, a central bank, either alone or in cooperation with other parts of the government, retains considerable power to expand aggregate demand and economic activity even when its accustomed policy rate is at zero. In the remainder of my talk, I will first discuss measures for preventing deflation--the preferable option if feasible. I will then turn to policy measures that the Fed and other government authorities can take if prevention efforts fail and deflation appears to be gaining a foothold in the economy.

    Preventing Deflation
    As I have already emphasized, deflation is generally the result of low and falling aggregate demand. The basic prescription for preventing deflation is therefore straightforward, at least in principle: Use monetary and fiscal policy as needed to support aggregate spending, in a manner as nearly consistent as possible with full utilization of economic resources and low and stable inflation. In other words, the best way to get out of trouble is not to get into it in the first place. Beyond this commonsense injunction, however, there are several measures that the Fed (or any central bank) can take to reduce the risk of falling into deflation.

    First, the Fed should try to preserve a buffer zone for the inflation rate, that is, during normal times it should not try to push inflation down all the way to zero.6 Most central banks seem to understand the need for a buffer zone. For example, central banks with explicit inflation targets almost invariably set their target for inflation above zero, generally between 1 and 3 percent per year. Maintaining an inflation buffer zone reduces the risk that a large, unanticipated drop in aggregate demand will drive the economy far enough into deflationary territory to lower the nominal interest rate to zero. Of course, this benefit of having a buffer zone for inflation must be weighed against the costs associated with allowing a higher inflation rate in normal times.

    Second, the Fed should take most seriously--as of course it does--its responsibility to ensure financial stability in the economy. Irving Fisher (1933) was perhaps the first economist to emphasize the potential connections between violent financial crises, which lead to "fire sales" of assets and falling asset prices, with general declines in aggregate demand and the price level. A healthy, well capitalized banking system and smoothly functioning capital markets are an important line of defense against deflationary shocks. The Fed should and does use its regulatory and supervisory powers to ensure that the financial system will remain resilient if financial conditions change rapidly. And at times of extreme threat to financial stability, the Federal Reserve stands ready to use the discount window and other tools to protect the financial system, as it did during the 1987 stock market crash and the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

    Third, as suggested by a number of studies, when inflation is already low and the fundamentals of the economy suddenly deteriorate, the central bank should act more preemptively and more aggressively than usual in cutting rates (Orphanides and Wieland, 2000; Reifschneider and Williams, 2000; Ahearne et al., 2002). By moving decisively and early, the Fed may be able to prevent the economy from slipping into deflation, with the special problems that entails.

    As I have indicated, I believe that the combination of strong economic fundamentals and policymakers that are attentive to downside as well as upside risks to inflation make significant deflation in the United States in the foreseeable future quite unlikely. But suppose that, despite all precautions, deflation were to take hold in the U.S. economy and, moreover, that the Fed's policy instrument--the federal funds rate--were to fall to zero. What then? In the remainder of my talk I will discuss some possible options for stopping a deflation once it has gotten under way. I should emphasize that my comments on this topic are necessarily speculative, as the modern Federal Reserve has never faced this situation nor has it pre-committed itself formally to any specific course of action should deflation arise. Furthermore, the specific responses the Fed would undertake would presumably depend on a number of factors, including its assessment of the whole range of risks to the economy and any complementary policies being undertaken by other parts of the U.S. government.7

    Curing Deflation
    Let me start with some general observations about monetary policy at the zero bound, sweeping under the rug for the moment some technical and operational issues.

    As I have mentioned, some observers have concluded that when the central bank's policy rate falls to zero--its practical minimum--monetary policy loses its ability to further stimulate aggregate demand and the economy. At a broad conceptual level, and in my view in practice as well, this conclusion is clearly mistaken. Indeed, under a fiat (that is, paper) money system, a government (in practice, the central bank in cooperation with other agencies) should always be able to generate increased nominal spending and inflation, even when the short-term nominal interest rate is at zero.

    The conclusion that deflation is always reversible under a fiat money system follows from basic economic reasoning. A little parable may prove useful: Today an ounce of gold sells for $300, more or less. Now suppose that a modern alchemist solves his subject's oldest problem by finding a way to produce unlimited amounts of new gold at essentially no cost. Moreover, his invention is widely publicized and scientifically verified, and he announces his intention to begin massive production of gold within days. What would happen to the price of gold? Presumably, the potentially unlimited supply of cheap gold would cause the market price of gold to plummet. Indeed, if the market for gold is to any degree efficient, the price of gold would collapse immediately after the announcement of the invention, before the alchemist had produced and marketed a single ounce of yellow metal.

    What has this got to do with monetary policy? Like gold, U.S. dollars have value only to the extent that they are strictly limited in supply. But the U.S. government has a technology, called a printing press (or, today, its electronic equivalent), that allows it to produce as many U.S. dollars as it wishes at essentially no cost. By increasing the number of U.S. dollars in circulation, or even by credibly threatening to do so, the U.S. government can also reduce the value of a dollar in terms of goods and services, which is equivalent to raising the prices in dollars of those goods and services. We conclude that, under a paper-money system, a determined government can always generate higher spending and hence positive inflation.

    Of course, the U.S. government is not going to print money and distribute it willy-nilly (although as we will see later, there are practical policies that approximate this behavior).8 Normally, money is injected into the economy through asset purchases by the Federal Reserve. To stimulate aggregate spending when short-term interest rates have reached zero, the Fed must expand the scale of its asset purchases or, possibly, expand the menu of assets that it buys. Alternatively, the Fed could find other ways of injecting money into the system--for example, by making low-interest-rate loans to banks or cooperating with the fiscal authorities. Each method of adding money to the economy has advantages and drawbacks, both technical and economic. One important concern in practice is that calibrating the economic effects of nonstandard means of injecting money may be difficult, given our relative lack of experience with such policies. Thus, as I have stressed already, prevention of deflation remains preferable to having to cure it. If we do fall into deflation, however, we can take comfort that the logic of the printing press example must assert itself, and sufficient injections of money will ultimately always reverse a deflation.

    So what then might the Fed do if its target interest rate, the overnight federal funds rate, fell to zero? One relatively straightforward extension of current procedures would be to try to stimulate spending by lowering rates further out along the Treasury term structure--that is, rates on government bonds of longer maturities.9 There are at least two ways of bringing down longer-term rates, which are complementary and could be employed separately or in combination. One approach, similar to an action taken in the past couple of years by the Bank of Japan, would be for the Fed to commit to holding the overnight rate at zero for some specified period. Because long-term interest rates represent averages of current and expected future short-term rates, plus a term premium, a commitment to keep short-term rates at zero for some time--if it were credible--would induce a decline in longer-term rates. A more direct method, which I personally prefer, would be for the Fed to begin announcing explicit ceilings for yields on longer-maturity Treasury debt (say, bonds maturing within the next two years). The Fed could enforce these interest-rate ceilings by committing to make unlimited purchases of securities up to two years from maturity at prices consistent with the targeted yields. If this program were successful, not only would yields on medium-term Treasury securities fall, but (because of links operating through expectations of future interest rates) yields on longer-term public and private debt (such as mortgages) would likely fall as well.

    Lower rates over the maturity spectrum of public and private securities should strengthen aggregate demand in the usual ways and thus help to end deflation. Of course, if operating in relatively short-dated Treasury debt proved insufficient, the Fed could also attempt to cap yields of Treasury securities at still longer maturities, say three to six years. Yet another option would be for the Fed to use its existing authority to operate in the markets for agency debt (for example, mortgage-backed securities issued by Ginnie Mae, the Government National Mortgage Association).

    Historical experience tends to support the proposition that a sufficiently determined Fed can peg or cap Treasury bond prices and yields at other than the shortest maturities. The most striking episode of bond-price pegging occurred during the years before the Federal Reserve-Treasury Accord of 1951.10 Prior to that agreement, which freed the Fed from its responsibility to fix yields on government debt, the Fed maintained a ceiling of 2-1/2 percent on long-term Treasury bonds for nearly a decade. Moreover, it simultaneously established a ceiling on the twelve-month Treasury certificate of between 7/8 percent to 1-1/4 percent and, during the first half of that period, a rate of 3/8 percent on the 90-day Treasury bill. The Fed was able to achieve these low interest rates despite a level of outstanding government debt (relative to GDP) significantly greater than we have today, as well as inflation rates substantially more variable. At times, in order to enforce these low rates, the Fed had actually to purchase the bulk of outstanding 90-day bills. Interestingly, though, the Fed enforced the 2-1/2 percent ceiling on long-term bond yields for nearly a decade without ever holding a substantial share of long-maturity bonds outstanding.11 For example, the Fed held 7.0 percent of outstanding Treasury securities in 1945 and 9.2 percent in 1951 (the year of the Accord), almost entirely in the form of 90-day bills. For comparison, in 2001 the Fed held 9.7 percent of the stock of outstanding Treasury debt.

    To repeat, I suspect that operating on rates on longer-term Treasuries would provide sufficient leverage for the Fed to achieve its goals in most plausible scenarios. If lowering yields on longer-dated Treasury securities proved insufficient to restart spending, however, the Fed might next consider attempting to influence directly the yields on privately issued securities. Unlike some central banks, and barring changes to current law, the Fed is relatively restricted in its ability to buy private securities directly.12 However, the Fed does have broad powers to lend to the private sector indirectly via banks, through the discount window.13 Therefore a second policy option, complementary to operating in the markets for Treasury and agency debt, would be for the Fed to offer fixed-term loans to banks at low or zero interest, with a wide range of private assets (including, among others, corporate bonds, commercial paper, bank loans, and mortgages) deemed eligible as collateral.14 For example, the Fed might make 90-day or 180-day zero-interest loans to banks, taking corporate commercial paper of the same maturity as collateral. Pursued aggressively, such a program could significantly reduce liquidity and term premiums on the assets used as collateral. Reductions in these premiums would lower the cost of capital both to banks and the nonbank private sector, over and above the beneficial effect already conferred by lower interest rates on government securities.15

    The Fed can inject money into the economy in still other ways. For example, the Fed has the authority to buy foreign government debt, as well as domestic government debt. Potentially, this class of assets offers huge scope for Fed operations, as the quantity of foreign assets eligible for purchase by the Fed is several times the stock of U.S. government debt.16

    I need to tread carefully here. Because the economy is a complex and interconnected system, Fed purchases of the liabilities of foreign governments have the potential to affect a number of financial markets, including the market for foreign exchange. In the United States, the Department of the Treasury, not the Federal Reserve, is the lead agency for making international economic policy, including policy toward the dollar; and the Secretary of the Treasury has expressed the view that the determination of the value of the U.S. dollar should be left to free market forces. Moreover, since the United States is a large, relatively closed economy, manipulating the exchange value of the dollar would not be a particularly desirable way to fight domestic deflation, particularly given the range of other options available. Thus, I want to be absolutely clear that I am today neither forecasting nor recommending any attempt by U.S. policymakers to target the international value of the dollar.

    Although a policy of intervening to affect the exchange value of the dollar is nowhere on the horizon today, it's worth noting that there have been times when exchange rate policy has been an effective weapon against deflation. A striking example from U.S. history is Franklin Roosevelt's 40 percent devaluation of the dollar against gold in 1933-34, enforced by a program of gold purchases and domestic money creation. The devaluation and the rapid increase in money supply it permitted ended the U.S. deflation remarkably quickly. Indeed, consumer price inflation in the United States, year on year, went from -10.3 percent in 1932 to -5.1 percent in 1933 to 3.4 percent in 1934.17 The economy grew strongly, and by the way, 1934 was one of the best years of the century for the stock market. If nothing else, the episode illustrates that monetary actions can have powerful effects on the economy, even when the nominal interest rate is at or near zero, as was the case at the time of Roosevelt's devaluation.

    Fiscal Policy
    Each of the policy options I have discussed so far involves the Fed's acting on its own. In practice, the effectiveness of anti-deflation policy could be significantly enhanced by cooperation between the monetary and fiscal authorities. A broad-based tax cut, for example, accommodated by a program of open-market purchases to alleviate any tendency for interest rates to increase, would almost certainly be an effective stimulant to consumption and hence to prices. Even if households decided not to increase consumption but instead re-balanced their portfolios by using their extra cash to acquire real and financial assets, the resulting increase in asset values would lower the cost of capital and improve the balance sheet positions of potential borrowers. A money-financed tax cut is essentially equivalent to Milton Friedman's famous "helicopter drop" of money.18

    Of course, in lieu of tax cuts or increases in transfers the government could increase spending on current goods and services or even acquire existing real or financial assets. If the Treasury issued debt to purchase private assets and the Fed then purchased an equal amount of Treasury debt with newly created money, the whole operation would be the economic equivalent of direct open-market operations in private assets.

    Japan
    The claim that deflation can be ended by sufficiently strong action has no doubt led you to wonder, if that is the case, why has Japan not ended its deflation? The Japanese situation is a complex one that I cannot fully discuss today. I will just make two brief, general points.

    First, as you know, Japan's economy faces some significant barriers to growth besides deflation, including massive financial problems in the banking and corporate sectors and a large overhang of government debt. Plausibly, private-sector financial problems have muted the effects of the monetary policies that have been tried in Japan, even as the heavy overhang of government debt has made Japanese policymakers more reluctant to use aggressive fiscal policies (for evidence see, for example, Posen, 1998). Fortunately, the U.S. economy does not share these problems, at least not to anything like the same degree, suggesting that anti-deflationary monetary and fiscal policies would be more potent here than they have been in Japan.

    Second, and more important, I believe that, when all is said and done, the failure to end deflation in Japan does not necessarily reflect any technical infeasibility of achieving that goal. Rather, it is a byproduct of a longstanding political debate about how best to address Japan's overall economic problems. As the Japanese certainly realize, both restoring banks and corporations to solvency and implementing significant structural change are necessary for Japan's long-run economic health. But in the short run, comprehensive economic reform will likely impose large costs on many, for example, in the form of unemployment or bankruptcy. As a natural result, politicians, economists, businesspeople, and the general public in Japan have sharply disagreed about competing proposals for reform. In the resulting political deadlock, strong policy actions are discouraged, and cooperation among policymakers is difficult to achieve.

    In short, Japan's deflation problem is real and serious; but, in my view, political constraints, rather than a lack of policy instruments, explain why its deflation has persisted for as long as it has. Thus, I do not view the Japanese experience as evidence against the general conclusion that U.S. policymakers have the tools they need to prevent, and, if necessary, to cure a deflationary recession in the United States.

    Conclusion
    Sustained deflation can be highly destructive to a modern economy and should be strongly resisted. Fortunately, for the foreseeable future, the chances of a serious deflation in the United States appear remote indeed, in large part because of our economy's underlying strengths but also because of the determination of the Federal Reserve and other U.S. policymakers to act preemptively against deflationary pressures. Moreover, as I have discussed today, a variety of policy responses are available should deflation appear to be taking hold. Because some of these alternative policy tools are relatively less familiar, they may raise practical problems of implementation and of calibration of their likely economic effects. For this reason, as I have emphasized, prevention of deflation is preferable to cure. Nevertheless, I hope to have persuaded you that the Federal Reserve and other economic policymakers would be far from helpless in the face of deflation, even should the federal funds rate hit its zero bound.19




    References

    Ahearne, Alan, Joseph Gagnon, Jane Haltmaier, Steve Kamin, and others, "Preventing Deflation: Lessons from Japan's Experiences in the 1990s," Board of Governors, International Finance Discussion Paper No. 729, June 2002.

    Clouse, James, Dale Henderson, Athanasios Orphanides, David Small, and Peter Tinsley, "Monetary Policy When the Nominal Short-term Interest Rate Is Zero," Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Finance and Economics Discussion Series No. 2000-51, November 2000.

    Eichengreen, Barry, and Peter M. Garber, "Before the Accord: U.S. Monetary-Financial Policy, 1945-51," in R. Glenn Hubbard, ed., Financial Markets and Financial Crises, Chicago: University of Chicago Press for NBER, 1991.

    Eggertson, Gauti, "How to Fight Deflation in a Liquidity Trap: Committing to Being Irresponsible," unpublished paper, International Monetary Fund, October 2002.

    Fisher, Irving, "The Debt-Deflation Theory of Great Depressions," Econometrica (March 1933) pp. 337-57.

    Hetzel, Robert L. and Ralph F. Leach, "The Treasury-Fed Accord: A New Narrative Account," Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, Economic Quarterly (Winter 2001) pp. 33-55.

    Orphanides, Athanasios and Volker Wieland, "Efficient Monetary Design Near Price Stability," Journal of the Japanese and International Economies (2000) pp. 327-65.

    Posen, Adam S., Restoring Japan's Economic Growth, Washington, D.C.: Institute for International Economics, 1998.

    Reifschneider, David, and John C. Williams, "Three Lessons for Monetary Policy in a Low-Inflation Era," Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking (November 2000) Part 2 pp. 936-66.

    Toma, Mark, "Interest Rate Controls: The United States in the 1940s," Journal of Economic History (September 1992) pp. 631-50.










    Footnotes


    1. Conceivably, deflation could also be caused by a sudden, large expansion in aggregate supply arising, for example, from rapid gains in productivity and broadly declining costs. I don't know of any unambiguous example of a supply-side deflation, although China in recent years is a possible case. Note that a supply-side deflation would be associated with an economic boom rather than a recession. Return to text

    2. The nominal interest rate is the sum of the real interest rate and expected inflation. If expected inflation moves with actual inflation, and the real interest rate is not too variable, then the nominal interest rate declines when inflation declines--an effect known as the Fisher effect, after the early twentieth-century economist Irving Fisher. If the rate of deflation is equal to or greater than the real interest rate, the Fisher effect predicts that the nominal interest rate will equal zero. Return to text

    3. The real interest rate equals the nominal interest rate minus the expected rate of inflation (see the previous footnote). The real interest rate measures the real (that is, inflation-adjusted) cost of borrowing or lending. Return to text

    4. Throughout the latter part of the nineteenth century, a worldwide gold shortage was forcing down prices in all countries tied to the gold standard. Ironically, however, by the time that Bryan made his famous speech, a new cyanide-based method for extracting gold from ore had greatly increased world gold supplies, ending the deflationary pressure. Return to text

    5. A rather different, but historically important, problem associated with the zero bound is the possibility that policymakers may mistakenly interpret the zero nominal interest rate as signaling conditions of "easy money." The Federal Reserve apparently made this error in the 1930s. In fact, when prices are falling, the real interest rate may be high and monetary policy tight, despite a nominal interest rate at or near zero. Return to text

    6. Several studies have concluded that the measured rate of inflation overstates the "true" rate of inflation, because of several biases in standard price indexes that are difficult to eliminate in practice. The upward bias in the measurement of true inflation is another reason to aim for a measured inflation rate above zero. Return to text

    7. See Clouse et al. (2000) for a more detailed discussion of monetary policy options when the nominal short-term interest rate is zero. Return to text

    8. Keynes, however, once semi-seriously proposed, as an anti-deflationary measure, that the government fill bottles with currency and bury them in mine shafts to be dug up by the public. Return to text

    9. Because the term structure is normally upward sloping, especially during periods of economic weakness, longer-term rates could be significantly above zero even when the overnight rate is at the zero bound. Return to text

    10. S See Hetzel and Leach (2001) for a fascinating account of the events leading to the Accord. Return to text

    11. See Eichengreen and Garber (1991) and Toma (1992) for descriptions and analyses of the pre-Accord period. Both articles conclude that the Fed's commitment to low inflation helped convince investors to hold long-term bonds at low rates in the 1940s and 1950s. (A similar dynamic would work in the Fed's favor today.) The rate-pegging policy finally collapsed because the money creation associated with buying Treasury securities was generating inflationary pressures. Of course, in a deflationary situation, generating inflationary pressure is precisely what the policy is trying to accomplish.

    An episode apparently less favorable to the view that the Fed can manipulate Treasury yields was the so-called Operation Twist of the 1960s, during which an attempt was made to raise short-term yields and lower long-term yields simultaneously by selling at the short end and buying at the long end. Academic opinion on the effectiveness of Operation Twist is divided. In any case, this episode was rather small in scale, did not involve explicit announcement of target rates, and occurred when interest rates were not close to zero. Return to text

    12. The Fed is allowed to buy certain short-term private instruments, such as bankers' acceptances, that are not much used today. It is also permitted to make IPC (individual, partnership, and corporation) loans directly to the private sector, but only under stringent criteria. This latter power has not been used since the Great Depression but could be invoked in an emergency deemed sufficiently serious by the Board of Governors. Return to text

    13. Effective January 9, 2003, the discount window will be restructured into a so-called Lombard facility, from which well-capitalized banks will be able to borrow freely at a rate above the federal funds rate. These changes have no important bearing on the present discussion. Return to text

    14. By statute, the Fed has considerable leeway to determine what assets to accept as collateral. Return to text

    15. In carrying out normal discount window operations, the Fed absorbs virtually no credit risk because the borrowing bank remains responsible for repaying the discount window loan even if the issuer of the asset used as collateral defaults. Hence both the private issuer of the asset and the bank itself would have to fail nearly simultaneously for the Fed to take a loss. The fact that the Fed bears no credit risk places a limit on how far down the Fed can drive the cost of capital to private nonbank borrowers. For various reasons the Fed might well be reluctant to incur credit risk, as would happen if it bought assets directly from the private nonbank sector. However, should this additional measure become necessary, the Fed could of course always go to the Congress to ask for the requisite powers to buy private assets. The Fed also has emergency powers to make loans to the private sector (see footnote 12), which could be brought to bear if necessary. Return to text

    16. The Fed has committed to the Congress that it will not use this power to "bail out" foreign governments; hence in practice it would purchase only highly rated foreign government debt. Return to text

    17. U.S. Bureau of the Census, Historical Statistics of the United States, Colonial Times to 1970, Washington, D.C.: 1976. Return to text

    18. A tax cut financed by money creation is the equivalent of a bond-financed tax cut plus an open-market operation in bonds by the Fed, and so arguably no explicit coordination is needed. However, a pledge by the Fed to keep the Treasury's borrowing costs low, as would be the case under my preferred alternative of fixing portions of the Treasury yield curve, might increase the willingness of the fiscal authorities to cut taxes.

    Some have argued (on theoretical rather than empirical grounds) that a money-financed tax cut might not stimulate people to spend more because the public might fear that future tax increases will just "take back" the money they have received. Eggertson (2002) provides a theoretical analysis showing that, if government bonds are not indexed to inflation and certain other conditions apply, a money-financed tax cut will in fact raise spending and inflation. In brief, the reason is that people know that inflation erodes the real value of the government's debt and, therefore, that it is in the interest of the government to create some inflation. Hence they will believe the government's promise not to "take back" in future taxes the money distributed by means of the tax cut. Return to text

    19. Some recent academic literature has warned of the possibility of an "uncontrolled deflationary spiral," in which deflation feeds on itself and becomes inevitably more severe. To the best of my knowledge, none of these analyses consider feasible policies of the type that I have described today. I have argued here that these policies would eliminate the possibility of uncontrollable deflation. Return to text


     


     


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March 26, 2006

March 25, 2006

  • Real Gross Domestic Product Graph


    Personal Saving Rate Graph









  • Posted on Sat, Mar. 25, 2006

    The San Jose Mercury News

    More rate hikes expected, at least over short term


    Knight Ridder

    Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke presides Monday over his first meeting to set interest rates. Taking a cue from Alan Greenspan, his long-serving predecessor, he's already signaled that a 15th consecutive rate increase is coming.


    Everyone expects Bernanke and the Fed's policy-making body, the Open Market Committee, to raise its benchmark short-term loan rate by another quarter-point, to 4.75 percent, when its two-day meeting ends Tuesday. That will prompt banks to raise their lending rates similarly for consumers and businesses.


    Why all the fuss, then, if everyone knows what's going to happen?


    Many analysts hope the Fed's statement after the meeting will signal that the tight-money policy, which dates back to June 2004, will draw to a close in the next few months, ending the squeeze on borrowing that's costing consumers and businesses.


    Bernanke took the Fed's reins Feb. 1, succeeding the often opaque Greenspan, who led the Fed for nearly 19 years. Bernanke, a former Princeton University professor, is already making his mark as a better communicator.


    The new Fed chairman was as clear as daylight this week when he dismissed concerns that the bond market may be foreshadowing an economic slowdown or recession. He said Monday that he expects healthy economic growth to continue, a stance that suggests that at least one or two more rate increases are coming.


    Here's why: Given today's strong economy, the Fed considers rising inflation a greater threat than the economy stumbling under the pressure of higher loan rates. Better to be tougher on inflation than have it sneak up unexpectedly, because once inflation's on the rise, it's much harder to tamp down.


    ``We know from history that expectations about inflation tend to be self-fulfilling,'' said Victor Li, an economics professor at Pennsylvania's Villanova University and a former academic colleague of Bernanke. ``There's the need for the Fed to establish credibility, that they're going to control inflation.''


    Many economists believe that core inflation -- the rise in prices excluding volatile food and energy prices -- is likely to increase later this year. They point to high commodity prices that tend to pass through the entire manufacturing chain. And they point out that the nation is near full employment, making workers scarce and forcing companies to pay more to attract or keep labor. That's called wage inflation.


    David F. Seiders, chief economist for the National Association of Home Builders, cited those concerns when he said a slowdown in U.S. economic growth is necessary and likely to begin later this year and last into 2007. Seiders thinks the Fed ``firmly believes that upward pressures on inflation are building below the surface, and further rate increases by the central bank are likely next week and again in May.


    James Paulsen, chief investment strategist for San Francisco-based Wells Capital Management, expects core inflation to inch toward 3 percent later this year. That's the upper limit of the Fed's comfort zone.


    ``Although by standards of the last 35 years, such an inflation rate hardly seems alarming, it will likely keep the Fed tightening interest rates for much longer and much higher than most now anticipate,'' he wrote Tuesday.




     


     


     









  • Posted on Sat, Mar. 25, 2006

    The San Jose Mercury News

    Gas prices flying back up

    ETHANOL SUPPLY WORRIES ARE FACTOR

    Mercury News

    Gas prices could be marching toward $3 a gallon by summer and drivers are already starting to feel it at the pump.


    Worries that ethanol could be in short supply this spring helped push the average price of gas in California to $2.70 a gallon on Friday, 20 cents higher than a month ago and a 33-cent jump from a year ago.


    Prices could go even higher as more regions and oil companies begin using ethanol instead of the fuel-cleaning additive MTBE, or methyl tertiary butyl, because of underground water contamination fears.


    ``The shift from MTBE to ethanol is causing problems up and down the entire supply chain,'' said Sean Comey, who tracks gasoline prices for the American Automobile Association. ``Unfortunately, there are some troubling signs on the horizon.''


    Last month the Energy Department reported that Midwestern producers could have trouble getting enough ethanol-blended gas to the nation. MTBE can be shipped rapidly through pipelines, while ethanol, which corrodes pipes, is moved on trucks, trains and barges.


    Also, refineries need more gas when using ethanol, so demand goes up. If there is not enough ethanol to go around, prices are affected from New York to the Bay Area.


    The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency last month ruled that California did not have to use ethanol in its gas after state officials convinced the EPA they could find a way to produce a clean fuel without MTBE or ethanol. But that restriction won't be lifted for some time. Some companies have ethanol contracts still in effect and only recently spent millions of dollars retooling refineries to blend ethanol with gas.


    Bob Dinneen, president of the Renewable Fuels Association, told the Associated Press that suppliers might fill storage tanks on the East Coast with ethanol before summer. But that has done little to ease nervousness.


    In addition, California refineries are now switching from a winter to a cleaner-burning summer fuel. The switch creates a temporary decrease in supplies, contributing to higher prices. Last week the production of reformulated gas fell nearly 7 percent statewide.


    For owners of diesel cars and trucks, the pinch is greater. Some stations are selling diesel for $2.99 a gallon.


    By summer, gas prices could approach the $3 mark, reached last fall after hurricanes Katrina and Rita ripped into the Gulf Coast.


    ``We're rapidly approaching pre-Katrina high prices,'' Comey said, ``and we're headed into the time of year when fuel consumption typically increases, resulting in higher prices.''


    If prices continue to soar, will drivers use their cars less or jump onto mass transit? An AAA survey last year found that 25 percent of drivers have cut down on driving at current prices while another 29 percent say they will drive less if prices top $3 a gallon.


    Rising pump costs have Burt Cummings of Menlo Park taking several steps to conserve: dumping his family's gas guzzling Suburban for a hybrid Highlander, using a Shell credit card with a 5 percent rebate on gas purchases, clicking onto www.gaspricewatch.com to find stations with the lowest prices and watching how he drives.


    ``Steady starts, gradual braking,'' said Cummings, 52, CEO of an Internet company, who says he's trying to counter ``those people who make their jackrabbit starts, drive Hummers, and pass me at 75-80 mph on the Dumbarton, 880, 280 and about everywhere. . . . It wouldn't matter so much if these people were the only ones who had to pay the price, but we all are.''







     


     


     

March 3, 2006

  •  


     


    Do You Realize
    that you have
    the most
    beautiful face

    Do You Realize
    we're floating in space

    Do You Realize
    that happiness
    makes you cry

    Do You Realize
    that everyone
    you know
    someday
    will die

    And instead of saying all of your goodbyes
    let them know
    you realize
    that life goes fast
    It's hard to make
    the good things last
    you realize the sun doesn't go down
    it's just an illusion
    caused by the world
    spinning round

    Do You Realize
    that everyone
    you know
    someday
    will die

    Do You Realize


     


    ----------------------------------------


    The Flaming Lips
    "Do You Realize"


    -----------------------------------------


     

February 25, 2006

  • DIED: Raymond Carver, 50, hard-bitten poet and short story writer and a leading   practitioner of the spare American style known as minimalism; of lung cancer; in Port Angeles, Washington.  Carver overcame bouts of alcoholism and labored as a sawmill operator and janitor, the inspiration for his stories chronicling the lives of the working   poor.  His story collections include Will You Please Be Quiet, Please? and Cathedral   (TIME 46).


     



    What The Doctor Said


    By Raymond Carver




    He said it doesn't look good
    he said it looks bad in fact real bad
    he said I counted thirty-two of them
    on one lung before I quit counting them
    I said I'm glad I wouldn't want to know
    about any more being there than that
    he said are you a religious man
    do you kneel down in forest groves
    and let yourself ask for help
    when you come to a waterfall mist
    blowing against your face and arms
    do you stop and ask for understanding at those moments
    I said not yet but I intend to start today
    he said I'm real sorry he said
    I wish I had some other kind of news to give you
    I said Amen
    and he said something else I didn't catch
    and not knowing what else to do
    and not wanting him to have to repeat it
    and me to have to fully digest it
    I just looked at him for a minute
    and he looked back
    it was then I jumped up and shook hands with this man
    who'd just given me something no one else on earth had ever given me
    I may have even thanked him
    habit being so strong


     

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    Kenneth J. Dwyer

     

     

    2-19-26 to 2-20-06


    Kenneth J. Dwyer passed away peacefully at the PAVA Hospice, in Palo Alto after an
    11-month battle with lung cancer.

    Ken is survived by his wife of 53 years, Audrey, and his family: Janet, Paul (and wife
    Cathy); Nancy (and her husband, Craig) Stafford; and Todd. He is also survived by his
    four grandchildren; Sean and Rachel Dwyer, Danielle and Andrew Stafford.
    Ken is also survived by his sister, Thurley Dwyer Khoury, and his two nieces,
    Caroline and Prudence.


    A veteran of World War II, Korea and Vietnam, Ken was awarded the Silver Star for
    gallantry in action during the Korean conflict. He retired from the army as a major in
    1964 and then retired from the Santa Clara Post Office in 1988.


    Ken was a devoted family man, an avid chess player and enjoyed watching sports,
    especially football and golf, with his family on the weekends. Ken found the internet and
    enjoyed staying in touch with his OCS (Class of '48) classmates on-line.


    Services will be held at the San Joaquin National Cemetery, Gustine, CA, on Thursday,
    3-9-06 at 1 p.m. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made in memory of Ken to the
    Hospice Care Center at PAVA Hospital, 3801 Miranda Avenue, 100-2C, Palo Alto,
    CA, 94304, or the American Cancer Society, Research, 747 Camden Avenue, Suite B,
    Campbell, CA, 95008.

     

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