Hedged.Biz

  • Disclaimer
  • About Us
  • Articles
  • Home
  • Articles
  • Two models of inflation and interest rates
May 9, 2025

Two models of inflation and interest rates

Two models of inflation and interest rates

by Burnham Banks / Friday, 02 December 2022 | 10:29 am / Published in Articles
image_pdfimage_print

I’ve written about this elsewhere, always part of a wider survey of inflation and rates, but I really need to record this in one place now as it may be important later.

The Gibson Paradox observes that rates and inflation seem to be positively related more than can be explained by lag effects. I therefore went in search of theories that might support a positive relationship between the two and found one such article on the website of the St Louis Fed. The argument goes like this:

If the Fed raises interest rates the nominal rate and the real rate instantaneously rise. However, as the real rate is determined by the productivity and resource endowments of an economy and not monetary policy, the real rate must fade back to the original rate. This happens by inflation rising by the size of the rate hike. Conversely, rate cutting leads to weaker price pressures.

See the St Louis Fed’s article on Fisher’s view on interest rates here:

https://www.stlouisfed.org/publications/regional-economist/july-2016/neo-fisherism-a-radical-idea-or-the-most-obvious-solution-to-the-low-inflation-problem

 

I also sought a causal microeconomic theory to support the macroeconomic one. There were none I could find and so I formulated one of my own, which, and here is a serious caveat, has not been peer reviewed. The argument goes like this:

Cutting interest rates makes capital and land cheaper relative to labour. Labour has to compete by suppressing wage growth pressure. Conversely, rising rates makes capital and land more expensive leading to a substitution towards labour, putting pressure on wages to rise.

 

Ten Seconds Into The Future

“Hello. I’m Burnham Banks and I studied economics in the late 80s and early 90s. I’m still studying economics today and am still no wiser. This blog is a journal, a record of my thoughts and experiences. If we are destined to repeat our mistakes, we should at least repeat them faithfully. If not, then perhaps the past is a mischievous guide and we should try something new.”

Meta

  • Entries RSS

Featured Posts

  • Long short, hedging and market neutrality under unruly markets

  • Ten Seconds Never Felt So Long. 2025 Trade War.

  • Tariff Wars. The Best Response to Tariffs is to Cut One’s Own.

  • 2025 Geo Macro Scenario A

  • Fiction. Foundation CG. 2025 02

  • Thoughts from the Bar Stool. 2025 02

  • Trump. Vichy. Lebensraum.

  • FICTION. Ten Seconds Into The Future 2025

  • A Few Thoughts about AI

  • Ten Seconds into 2025. This is Thin…

  • Efficiency X Robustness and Other Tradeoffs

  • The Longevity Imperative

  • China Reflation Policy 2024

  • Three Big Themes, Investable or Not.

  • Fiction. Free Energy. Expropriation risk. Governance.

  • Fiction?: Matter and Interactions.

  • Blended Finance 1.0.1

  • Ten Second Into The Future 2024

  • Blended Finance 1.1

  • Environmental and Social Imperatives

  • Environment and Social Impact. Public Goods. Private Capital?

  • FICTION. Males are Alien Viruses. XY and XX.

  • Impact Investing 0.5

  • Ten Seconds Into The Future. 2023 Outlook.

  • The Fool.

Categories

  • Articles

Archives

  • RSS FEED

Copyright 2018 © Hedged.Biz All rights reserved

TOP