We could just as easily called this post "King's Birthday Math," as King Banaian marked Milton Friedman's birthday by presenting the math that underscores one of Friedman's greatest insights:
Inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon.
We'll let King take it from here:
I have been teaching intermediate macroeconomics this summer, using the textbook of our current central bank chair (along with Andrew Abel and Dean Croushore), and we just finished the chapter on money. Towards the end of that chapter we teach the relationship between inflation and growth of the money supply. There's an equation which I can try to recreate here in words:
inflation = growth in money supply - (income elasticity of money)x(growth of real GDP)
which assumes relatively stable velocity of money in the short run. Friedman had insisted that "inflation is everywhere and always a monetary phenomenon", and I suggested we use that equation to see where we are now. I tend not to make exact measurements in class, so if I do a little rounding here you can hopefully make adjustments if you want something a little more precise.
Today's GDP report for Q2 puts the growth of GDP at about 2%. Friedman had followed the quantity equation to make the income elasticity of money equal one. Other research puts the number closer to 2/3 or 0.7 (the Baumol-Tobin approach makes it the inverse of the square root of 2, which is roughly 0.71). People tend to economize on cash holdings as they become wealthier, so a result for that number less than 1 makes sense.
For money, I used M2 in class (you can look at other rates here or get the raw data and do your own; see also Mark Thoma for a primer on different velocities of money). The average growth rate appears to be around 6% for the recent data.
If you accept those data, then, what would you get? Assume the income elasticity is 2/3 and the growth of GDP is 2%, and your answer would be 4.33% inflation. Assume income elasticity is 1 and you get 4%.
Now, here's where we come in! We've taken King's formula and built a tool in which you can not only calculate the expected rate of inflation, but to do so using your own assumptions about what the correct values to use are. As an added bonus, you can also run the numbers with the latest available data. Our default data is drawn from King's discussion:
King has already run other estimated values:
If you use 2.7% for the long run growth rate of potential GDP as CBO estimates, an expected inflation rate for the long term of 3.4% is quite reasonable for an assumption that M2 money growth stays at current levels for some time into the future. That target inflation rate of 2% is increasingly looking like it's out the window. The Fed's gift to Friedman on this birthday should be a Fed funds rate increase at its next meeting.
Our expectation is that the Fed's Open Market Committee will give Friedman just that kind of gift at their next meeting!





