by Paul Krugman
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/14/opinion/krugman-fear-of-wages.html?_r=0
Four years ago, some of us watched with a mixture of
incredulity and horror as elite discussion of economic policy went completely
off the rails. Over the course of just a few months, influential people all
over the Western world convinced themselves and each other that budget deficits
were an existential threat, trumping any and all concern about mass
unemployment. The result was a turn to fiscal austerity that deepened and
prolonged the economic crisis, inflicting immense suffering.
And now it’s happening again. Suddenly, it seems as if
all the serious people are telling each other that despite high unemployment
there’s hardly any “slack” in labor markets — as evidenced by a supposed surge
in wages — and that the Federal Reserve needs to start raising interest rates
very soon to head off the danger of inflation.
To be fair, those making the case for monetary tightening
are more thoughtful and less overtly political than the archons of austerity
who drove the last wrong turn in policy. But the advice they’re giving could be
just as destructive.
O.K., where is this coming from?
The starting point for this turn in elite opinion is the
assertion that wages, after stagnating for years, have started to rise rapidly.
And it’s true that one popular measure of wages has indeed picked up, with an
especially large bump last month.
But that bump is probably a snow-related statistical
illusion. As economists at Goldman Sachs have pointed out,
average wages normally jump in bad weather — not because anyone’s wages
actually rise, but because the workers idled by snow and storms tend to be less
well-paid than those who aren’t affected.
Beyond that, we have multiple measures of wages, and only
one of them is showing a notable uptick. It’s far from clear that the alleged
wage acceleration is even happening.
And what’s wrong with rising wages, anyway? In the past,
wage increases of around 4 percent a year — more than twice the current rate —
have been consistent with low inflation. And there’s a very good case for
raising the Fed’s inflation target, which would mean seeking faster wage
growth, say 5 percent or 6 percent per year. Why? Because even the
International Monetary Fund now warns against the dangers of “lowflation”:
too low an inflation rate puts the economy at risk of Japanification, of
getting caught in a trap of economic stagnation and intractable debt.
Over all, then, while it’s possible to argue that we’re
running out of labor slack, it’s also possible to argue the opposite, and
either way the prudent thing would surely be to wait: Wait until there’s solid
evidence of rising wages, then wait some more until wage growth is at least
back to precrisis levels and preferably higher.
Yet for some reason there’s a growing drumbeat of demands
that we not wait, that we get ready to raise interest rates right away or at
least very soon. What’s that about?
Part of the answer, I’d submit, is that for some people
it’s always 1979. That is, they’re eternally vigilant against the danger of a
runaway wage-price spiral, and somehow they haven’t noticed that nothing like
that has happened for decades. Maybe it’s a generational thing. Maybe it’s
because a 1970s-style crisis fits their ideological preconceptions, but the
phantom menace of stagflation still has an outsized influence on economic
debate.
Then there’s sado-monetarism: the sense, all too common
in banking circles, that inflicting pain is ipso facto good. There are some people
and institutions — for example, the Basel-based Bank
for International Settlements — that always want to see interest rates
go up. Their rationale is ever-changing — it’s commodity prices; no, it’s
financial stability; no, it’s wages — but the recommended policy is always the
same.
Finally, although the current monetary debate isn’t as
openly political as the previous fiscal debate, it’s hard to escape the
suspicion that class interests are playing a role. A fair number of
commentators seem oddly upset by the notion of workers getting raises,
especially while returns to bondholders remain low. It’s almost as if they
identify with the investor class, and feel uncomfortable with anything that
brings us close to full employment, and thereby gives workers more bargaining
power.
Whatever the underlying motives, tightening the monetary
screws anytime soon would be a very, very bad idea. We are slowly, painfully,
emerging from the worst slump since the Great Depression. It wouldn’t take much
to abort the recovery, and, if that were to happen, we would almost certainly
be Japanified, stuck in a trap that might last decades.
Is wage growth actually taking off? That’s far from clear.
But if it is, we should see rising wages as a development to cheer and promote,
not a threat to be squashed with tight money.
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