Noah Smith brought up the issue of the long run Fisher effect. Yet, he wants to see micro-foundation models.
“Specifically, what I’d be interested to see is for someone to find some micro-foundations for the Neo-Fisherite result that don’t depend on fiscal policy reaction functions.â€
He found a paper written by Stephanie Schmitt-Grohé and MartÃn Uribe where they offer a solution to the liquidity trap using the Fisher effect. They conclude…
“Finally, the paper identifies an interest-rate-based strategy for escaping the liquidity trap and restoring full employment. It consists in pegging the nominal interest rate at its intended target level. … Therefore, in the liquidity trap an increase in the nominal interest rate is essentially a signal of higher future inflation. In turn, by its effect on real wages, future inflation stimulates employment, thereby lifting the economy out of the slump.â€
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What does “pegging the nominal interest rate at its intended target level†mean? The US Fed would peg the Fed rate at 4% or so, which would imply a 2% inflation target with a 2% natural real rate of interest. In my view, the economy would be much healthier if the Fed had started gradually raising the Fed rate two years ago toward a projected steady rate of 4% to 5%. I would expect a Fed rate around 3% now. Eventually the economy incorporates a 2% to 3% inflation potential according to the Fisher effect.
The approach to raising and then pegging the Fed rate must express a projected “steady-stateâ€. In this way, the Fed rate must rise gradually on a steady path to the intended target level where it will be pegged corresponding to full employment. The steady-state then draws the broader economy to it. The ultimate goal is to reach and hopefully maintain a steady-state at full employment. Whether or not capitalism has the nature to maintain a steady-state at full employment is a larger question.