Why people can’t agree on where interest rates are going | 为什么人们无法就利率走向达成一致 - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
FT英语电台

Why people can’t agree on where interest rates are going
为什么人们无法就利率走向达成一致

Methods of estimating so-called R-star are in the spotlight — unfortunately, none are good
估计所谓R-star的方法备受关注——不幸的是,没有一个是好的
00:00

undefined

Everyone is struggling to see where interest rates are headed. Investors are jittery, as shown by gyrating long-term Treasury yields. America’s central bankers are trying to project calm, but they are in a fog too. On August 25, Federal Reserve chair Jay Powell summarised the mood when he said “we are navigating by the stars under cloudy skies”. Economists do have some tools to illuminate the path ahead. But they aren’t very helpful.

The object everyone is searching for is the neutral rate of interest, or R-star for short. (Economists seem to struggle with nicknames.) It is the (real) rate that neither buoys nor depresses the economy once temporary shocks have faded away. Central bankers believe that they can neither influence it nor observe it. Their task is merely to divine it.

Although most agree that over recent decades R-star has fallen, its recent moves are more mysterious. An estimate published by the Richmond Fed suggests that it fell from around 2.2 per cent in April 2008 to 0.8 per cent two years later, but by April 2023 had recovered. By contrast, an estimate from the New York Fed finds that in April 2023 it was still around two percentage points lower than before the global financial crisis. In April, the IMF used a more complicated model to argue that it is probably still very low.

These estimates diverge because of different trade-offs made by their designers. One approach is to make lots of assumptions about how the economy works to strip out the noise associated with shocks. But it suffers the risk that the assumptions — and therefore the results — are rubbish. An alternative relies more on recent data. But that risks results that reflect temporary shocks, not the future once they fade.

Take the data-heavy method deployed by the Richmond Fed, which uses a very sophisticated moving average to forecast long-run rates. Given the recent resilience of America’s economy, it should probably be no surprise that it suggests a rising R-star. Unfortunately, it suffers from statistical error bands the size of a bus. Although the median estimate is 2.3 per cent, the lower bound is 1.4 per cent and upper bound is 3.6 per cent. That is about as useful as being told that one’s Friday night pizza will arrive anytime between 6pm and 11pm.

The New York Fed’s method uses more theory. It assumes a relationship between inflation, the position of the economy relative to its potential and interest rates, then brings in data to infer the position of R-star. The cost of this approach became apparent over the pandemic, when the model was spitting out such implausible numbers that it was temporarily suspended. Now the tweaked model describing America’s R-star is back.

The approach deployed by the IMF is the most theory-driven of them all. In the long run, factors like demographic change, productivity growth and fiscal policy should influence the balance of savings and investment. And the model delivers fantastically detailed breakdowns of exactly how much. Between 1975-79 and 2015-19, demographic change tugged down America’s R-star by 0.5 percentage points, and weak productivity growth by 1.23 percentage points.

undefined

Again, the danger is that these results tell you more about modelling than reality. Particularly if you believe a 2017 study from the Bank for International Settlements which argued that the simultaneous events of falling real interest rates, stalling productivity growth and ageing populations “appear coincidental”. Scouring data between 1860 and 2016, they reckon that changing monetary policy frameworks matter more.

The other way of measuring R-star is to look at the long-term interest rates implicit in investors’ pricing. One interesting study calculates the long-term interest rate implicit in the value of British flats before and after their leases are extended. It concludes that the natural rate of return on capital has not risen much since the pandemic. But that rate includes a risk premium associated with owning British property, and may be affected by other distortions. And of course, says Atif Mian, one of the study’s authors, the collective wisdom of the housing market “could be wrong”.

An anxious central banker could drive themselves mad worrying about the uncertainty ahead. What if R-star is indeed slow-moving, but the pandemic has revealed that we overestimated its fall during the 2010s? What if the expectations of central bankers and investors feed off each other? It’s probably not much comfort to say that these estimates of R-star are the best we have. But it should be more soothing to say that any mistakes will be just as hard to pin down.

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

囤积行为加剧伊朗战争引发的经济损害

随着霍尔木兹海峡的对峙进入第三个月,全球各国政府都在艰难应对同一个难题:如何防止囤积者加剧从汽油到注射器等各类产品的短缺。

FT社评:伊朗战争让各国央行进退两难

如果各国央行过早通过加息来遏制通胀压力,可能令本已受创的经济雪上加霜;如但果按兵不动、观望冲突的进展,又可能贻误时机。

反弹的通胀与不耐烦的特朗普:凯文•沃什面临双重压力

美国参议院本周有望批准这位56岁的金融家接替杰伊•鲍威尔出任美联储主席。

伊朗战争推高燃气价格,印度工人纷纷逃离城市生活

伊朗战争推高了烹饪燃料价格,迫使印度许多务工人员返乡回村。

能源、军火与粮食:特朗普对伊战争日益沉重的代价

这场冲突正波及整个美国经济,造成了数千亿美元的产出损失。

肺纤维化生物科技公司Avalyn Pharma申请首次公开募股(IPO)

一家生物技术公司正开发可吸入剂型的已获批肺纤维化口服药,计划赴公开市场融资以支持其后期研发。
2天前
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×