lecture 7: seignorage & hyperinflation

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API120 - Prof. J.Frankel LECTURE 7: SEIGNORAGE & HYPERINFLATION Key Question: Government attempts to stimulate the economy may explain moderate levels of money growth & inflation…. but why do high rates of inflation -- even hyperinflation -- sometimes occur?

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LECTURE 7: SEIGNORAGE & HYPERINFLATION. Key Question: Government attempts to stimulate the economy may explain moderate levels of money growth & inflation…. but why do high rates of inflation -- even hyperinflation -- sometimes occur?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: LECTURE 7:  SEIGNORAGE & HYPERINFLATION

API120 - Prof. J.Frankel

LECTURE 7: SEIGNORAGE & HYPERINFLATION

Key Question: Government attempts to stimulate the economy may explain moderate levels of money growth & inflation….

but why do high rates of inflation -- even hyperinflation -- sometimes occur?

Page 2: LECTURE 7:  SEIGNORAGE & HYPERINFLATION

The world’s most recent

hyperinflation: Zimbabwe,

2007-08

It reached 2,600% per mo. in mid-2008.

Inflation reached 50% per monthin March 2007, meeting definition of hyperinflation.

Page 3: LECTURE 7:  SEIGNORAGE & HYPERINFLATION

One estimate: In Nov. 2008, inflation rate p.a. supposedly at 89.7 sextillion (1021)%.

Dec. 2008, inflation p.a. at (6.5 x 10108 %).

The most recent rival for world record for hyperinflation

In April 2009, printing of the Zimbabwean dollar stopped; the S.Afr. Rand & US $ became the standard currencies for exchange.

API120 - Prof. J.Frankel

Page 4: LECTURE 7:  SEIGNORAGE & HYPERINFLATION

The driving force?Increase in money

supply:

The central bank monetized

government debt.

Page 5: LECTURE 7:  SEIGNORAGE & HYPERINFLATION

The exchange rate increased along with

the price level.Both increased far more than

the money supply.Why?

When the ongoing inflation rate is

high, the demand for money is low,

in response.For M/P to fall, P must go up more than M. API120 - Prof. J.Frankel

Page 6: LECTURE 7:  SEIGNORAGE & HYPERINFLATION

How do governments finance spending?• Taxes

• Borrowing ● Domestic †

● Abroad

• Seignorage ≡ creating money to finance deficits

† Regarding government borrowing, you may encounter -- “Ricardian” debt neutrality (Barro):

people know taxes eventually will rise. So Saving ↑ . -- “Fiscal dominance” (Sargent & Wallace; Woodford): people know

that the debt eventually will be monetized. So P ↑ .

Money creation in excess of increased money demand from real growth ≡ inflation tax.

API120 - Prof. J.Frankel

Page 7: LECTURE 7:  SEIGNORAGE & HYPERINFLATION

But a government that relies on seignorage to raise real resources risks

“killing the goose that lays the golden egg.”

• High money growth eventually gets built into expected inflation; and so the public reduces money demand– whether because πe is built into i (Fisher effect)– or because πe enters the money demand function directly.

• Bond markets often break down in hyperinflations.

– So M/P = L(πe , Y)

• When demand for real money balances falls, there is less of a “tax base” that the government can exploit.

API120 - Prof. J.Frankel

Page 8: LECTURE 7:  SEIGNORAGE & HYPERINFLATION

API120 - Prof. J.Frankel

Real money supply = real money demand.

In “steady state,” the actual & expected rates of inflation = the rate of money growth.

If πe rises, real money demand falls,as households protect themselves against the loss in purchasing power.

The fall in real M takes the form of a rise in P > rise in nominal M.

The government gets to spend at rate dM/dt in nominal terms.

A higher “tax rate” (inflation) lowersthe “tax base” (real money holdings).

πe = π = gM , where gM ≡ ,

=>M

dtdM /

dtdM /Seignorage =

P

M

M

dtdM /

= gM L(π, )

INFLATION TAX

“Inflation ↑ ↑ tax = “tax “tax revenue” rate” base”

In LR: Y = , and

Divide by P to see what that buys in terms of real resources.

P

1

Page 9: LECTURE 7:  SEIGNORAGE & HYPERINFLATION

Where π went the highest, P went up the most,even relative to the increase in M: M/P ↓

27.2

π

API120 - Prof. J.Frankel

Page 10: LECTURE 7:  SEIGNORAGE & HYPERINFLATION

API120 - Prof. J.Frankel

Inflation tax revenue is “tax rate” times “tax base.”

Page 11: LECTURE 7:  SEIGNORAGE & HYPERINFLATION

API120 - Prof. J.Frankel

If money growth = 0, seignorage = 0.

If inflation is very high, seignorage is very low.

You have killed the goose that laid thegolden eggs.

The seignorage-maximizing rate of money growth

11.7

Seignorage revenue as a function π L(π) of money growth rate

Page 12: LECTURE 7:  SEIGNORAGE & HYPERINFLATION

API120 - Prof. J.Frankel

Seignorage = π L(π, Y)

E.g., following Cagan, we choose exponential functional form: Let L( , ) ≡ e a-λπ Y .

Set derivative = 0.We thereby find that revenue-maximizing π is inversely related to λ, i.e., the sensitivity of money demand to π.

d

dLL

d

edSeignorag ),(

=> dL(,)/dπ = - λe a-λπ Y = -λ L(,).

dedSeignorag

= L(,) – π λ L(,)

= L( , ) [1– π λ]

=0 when π = 1/ λ

E.g., if λ=1/2,revenue-maximizing π=200%.Or higher, if in SR λ is lower.

For govt. to maximize seignorage,

Page 13: LECTURE 7:  SEIGNORAGE & HYPERINFLATION

API120 - Prof. J.Frankel

The seignorage-maximization approachdoesn’t get to true levels of hyperinflation,

if the revenue curve peaks at lower levels of inflation.

One needs a dynamic process, where• money-holders respond more adversely to inflation

over time than they do in the short run, and

• the central bank chases a receding seignorage target.

Cagan (1956) modeled adjustment in continuous time. (Or Romer, 4th ed., pp. 572-576)

Page 14: LECTURE 7:  SEIGNORAGE & HYPERINFLATION

Consider a stylized example of the dynamic process, which could end up at hyperinflation

• Assume – Elasticity rises over time from short run to long, and– Government tells CB to finance a budget target by seignorage (say, 92% GDP).

• In VSR, elasticity is low. Seignorage target can be reached with moderate rates of money creation & inflation π1 .

• Then, in SR, elasticity rises. => demand for money falls => π1 no longer raises enough real revenue.Þ CB raises money growth & inflation to π2 to attain required revenue.

• In MR, elasticity rises more => π2 no longer raises enough revenue.Þ CB raises money growth & inflation to π3 .

• In LR, elasticity rises more => π3 no longer raises enough revenue.Þ CB raises money growth & inflation to π4 ,

which is now past the revenue-maximizing hump. A foolish government might chase its target indefinitely.

API120 - Prof. J.Frankel

Page 15: LECTURE 7:  SEIGNORAGE & HYPERINFLATION

API120 - Prof. J.Frankel

VSRSR

MR

LR· · ·

?

Seignorage = π L(π) with functional form L(π) =e a-λπ Y.

inflation rate π

Assume govt. requires seignorage 92% of GDP

·

Page 16: LECTURE 7:  SEIGNORAGE & HYPERINFLATION

Appendix: Exchange rates in hyperinflations

S.Hanke

Increases in the exchange rate

Page 17: LECTURE 7:  SEIGNORAGE & HYPERINFLATION

The exchange rate in Zimbabwe’s hyperinflation

“Parallel rate”(black market)

Official rate