Showing posts with label John Taylor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Taylor. Show all posts

Friday, April 13, 2018

WCEG — Should-Read: Robert Skidelsky: The Advanced Economies’ Lost Decade

The eminent Robert Skidelsky identifies three groups of economists who gave what ex post was clearly bad advice, and bad advice that mattered about fiscal policy, from 2009 on: Alberto Alesina and company with their “expansionary austerity” doctrines, Ken Rogoff and company with their “short-term-pain-for-long-run-gain” doctrines, and Ricardo Haussman and company with the “no choice but austerity” doctrines. All three groups, however, had reasons for their arguments and were thinking hard—albeit, in my view, not as hard and as deeply as they ought to have and had a responsibility to do—and genuinely believed what they were putting forward. There were also three groups of economists giving bad advice who either did not believe what they were saying or had done no thinking at all: Robert Lucas and company with his “nothing to apply a multiplier to” ideological and unfounded claims that fiscal policy could never be effective; John Taylor, Marvin Goodfriend, and company with their Bernanke’s monetary expansion will produce currency debasement and inflation but will not boost employment; and a whole host of professional Republicans who ought to have been backing up Bernanke’s plans for further monetary stimulus and his call for an end to fiscal austerity headwinds, but were instead very quiet, as Elmer Fudd would say, in part at least not to annoy political masters in the Republican Party. I think the economics profession could have played a useful role in helping to manage the recovery if those three groups unmentioned by Skidelsky had not been present....
WCEG — The Equitablog
Should-Read: Robert Skidelsky: The Advanced Economies’ Lost Decade
Brad DeLong

Monday, October 30, 2017

David Glasner — Larry Summers v. John Taylor: No Contest


Mostly about John Taylor who seems to have made the final cut for Trump's short list to replace Janet Yellen, along with Jerome Powell, who is now a member of the Fed Board of Governors.

Should Fed policy be rule-based (Taylor) or discretionary (Powell)?

David Glasner argues against John Tayor and in doing so, gives us a close look at Taylor and his rule-based approach to monetary policy.

Uneasy Money
Larry Summers v. John Taylor: No Contest
David Glasner

Wednesday, August 2, 2017

Ramanan — Hangovers And Economic Ideology


Ramanan brings us up to speed on the latest controversy over policy, economic reasoning, and political ideology.

The Case for Concerted Action
Hangovers And Economic Ideology
V. Ramanan

Tuesday, September 16, 2014

Andrea Terzi — Searching hard for Taylor’s inflation

In February 2011, I was in the audience of a lecture given by John Taylor on the “exit strategy”. One main theme was that the policy of the Fed called “Quantitative Easing” meant a high risk of monetization and inflation, if not hyper-inflation, in the U.S. economy. In the Q&A session, I asked Professor Taylor why he thought that “monetization” is inflationary. I argued that Quantitative Easing boils down to portfolio shifts in banks’ balance sheets, and that asset reallocation does not seem to be causing an increase in demand, nor a price increase. His answer (that I quickly noted in every detail on a piece of paper) was:…
Any day now. We have a model. :)

Money And The Real Economy
Searching hard for Taylor’s inflation
Andrea Terzi, Professor of Economics, Franklin College, Switzerland

Monday, October 7, 2013

Another loser: John Taylor's FX Concepts now pretty much dead as he preached gold, "bought" hyperinflation and followed all the loser Austrian/Schiff views

Kyle Bass, Bill Gross, John Paulson all the other idiots trapped in a totally misinformed view of the monetary system and now you can add to that, John Taylor of FX Concepts, whose once $14 billion fund is down to practically nothing.

And that should be no surprise.

Listen to Taylor on CNBC telling everybody over a year ago to invest in gold because "they're gonna start pumping" and he uses all of the same, incredibly dumb arguments of morons like Peter Schiff, Nassim Taleb, etc.

(Of course, CNBC constantly puts these guys all over their air and that's why CNBC's ratings suck and are plummeting. Hello, CNBC????)

These guys--all MMT detractors--are losing their ass in the current environment. They're so, so, wrong. I, for one, am elated to see them stripped of their money.

Friday, August 2, 2013

John Taylor — Don Kohn on Rules-Based Monetary Policy



According to the New York Times, President Obama has narrowed the field of candidates for Fed chair to Larry Summers, Janet Yellin, and Don Kohn. John Taylor gives his impressions of Don Kohn and Taylor rules.

Economics One
Don Kohn on Rules-Based Monetary Policy
John B. Taylor | Mary and Robert Raymond Professor of Economics, Stanford University
(h/t Mark Thoma at Economist's View)

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Dirk Ehnts — Romneynomics is really just neoclassical economics in 2012

Six days ago, Paul Krugman set out to understand Romneynomics. Since I am currently teaching macroeconomics 101 I have collected some quotes and facts in order to show how neoclassical ideas moved from Say to Ayn Rand to Alan Greenspan to Mitt Romney. I think that neoclassical ideas should be seen as a meme, which is like a gene something that can spread. Keynesian economics would also be meme, so please don’t be offended.
econoblog101
Romneynomics is really just neoclassical economics in 2012
Dirk Ehnts | Berlin School for Economics and Law

Thursday, August 9, 2012

Simon Wren-Lewis — Giving Economics a Bad Name


Prof. Wren-Lewis reflects on Kevin Hassett, Glenn Hubbard, Gregory Mankiw, and John Taylor, "The Romney Program for Economic Recovery, Growth, and Jobs"
This is sad, because it tells us as much about economics as an academic discipline as it does about the individuals concerned. In the past I have imagined something similar happening in physics. It actually stretches the imagination to do so, but if it did, the academics concerned would immediately lose their academic reputation. The credibility of their work would be questioned. Responding to evidence rather than ignoring it is what distinguishes real science from pseudo science, and doctors from snake oil salesmen.
Ouch — way beyond smack down.

mainly macro
Giving Economics a Bad Name
Simon Wren-Lewis | Professor of Economics, Oxford University

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

DeLong smacks down Hassett, Hubbard, Mankiw, And Taylor


Brad DeLong smack down Kevin Hassett, Glenn Hubbard, Gregory Mankiw, and John Taylor — bad — very bad. Even uses the "L" word. IF they had any shame, they would be looking for a rock to climb under.

Brad DeLong | Grasping Reality with Both Invisible Hands
Things Wrong With Hassett, Hubbard, Mankiw, And Taylor, "The Romney Program For Economic Recovery, Growth, And Jobs"
J. Bradford DeLong | Professor of Economics, University of California at Berkeley and a research associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Today's crazy — John Taylor


John Taylor goes all in, even saying, "We [the US] could get into a situation like Greece, quite frankly."

Read it at Zero Hedge
Taylor Rule Founder Warns US Debt Could "Explode"
posted by Tyler Durden