January OCR Review preview: How low can you go

There is a complete consensus that the Reserve Bank will cut the official cash rate.  However, the size of the cut is still uncertain.

Mearly a fortnight ago, safe money was on a 50bp cut with a large number of commentators suggesting 75bp.  To be honest, after coming out of December MPS it felt like another 75 in January was pretty likely.  Of course, since then world economic growth forecasts have collapsed, and domestic economic indicators have deteriorated – leading analysts to push for a 100+bp cut.

It is a tough call in such a fluid environment, but I’d be of the view that the Bank won’t go past 100.  Why?  Well commodity prices have steadied since December, credit markets have started to thaw, and a bunch of essential data points still haven’t been released – namely the December quarter employment figures.  If those figures are bad they can just cut 100 again in March – and they have a set of forecasts (from the MPS) to justify what they are doing.

Still – I have been consistently surprised by how much the Bank has been willing to cut the OCR 🙂 .  We will see tomorrow.

Forecast dairy payout down to $5.10: The key is now costs …

Homepaddock reports that Fonterra has cut its forecast payout for the coming season to $5.10 – well down on the $7.90 paid last season.

This is a significant decline in returns, however even though prices could go lower it is unlikely they will this season.  As a result this leaves us two other factors to look at when figuring out what will happen to disposable incomes among diary farmers:  quantity and costs.

As we are coming out of drought, quantity will have moved back towards “normality” (for an individual farmer) – this should help to improve returns relative to last year – however, farmers would have already accounted for that when making decisions.

The more important factor for me is costs.  Have fertiliser prices begun to tail off?  Will the sharp pull back in fuel prices help out?  These sorts of questions will be key for figuring out how heavily dairy farmers disposable income will suffer during this lull in dairy prices.

More concerns about limited building activity

The Dom post has two articles on the potential shortage of property in New Zealand, one on builders capacity (the labour force of traders) and another on the response of rents to the undersupply.

Now we have talked about this before.  Structural factors have prevented developers and builders from getting funding (go credit rationing) which has lead to a collapse in house building activity.  However, a fall off in building will help to support prices by making property more scarce.

In the short term the recent drop in residential building will prevent a free-fall in prices.  The question then is, how many of these structural factors are temporary (credit rationing) and how many are permanent (constraints on land use, RMA?)?

If we only have temporary factors keeping down building then we can expect a sharp decline in prices once this has worked through the system and the “undersupply” has been dealt with.  If there are structural factors (which National and Labour both believed) then there will be some support to prices until these factors are dealt with.

Another thing I would point out.  There is a feeling out there that house price falls=bad, greater housing affordability=good.  However, house price falls=greater housing affordability – so unless bad=good I think this is a factor we have to keep in mind when discussing the housing market …

Remember history when thinking of Keynesian economics

Over at Think Markets Mario Rizzo follows the advice of Paul Krugman and discusses what Keynes has actually said about infrastructure spending (ht Greg Mankiw):

Organized public works, at home and abroad, may be the right cure for a chronic tendency to a deficiency of effective demand. But they are not capable of sufficiently rapid organisation (and above all cannot be reversed or undone at a later date), to be the most serviceable instrument for the prevention of the trade cycle

So infrastructural investment is good when we are in some sort of reinforcing hole where effective demand is deficient and “will not” go back to our primary equilibrium. However, Keynes appears to be deriding infrastructural investment as a way to smooth the “economic cycle”.

I see this quote as justification for the idea that, if we have multiple pareto ranked equilibrium and a large shock government can help – but if we have a temporary shock to demand infrastructural investment is not the way (furthermore it says nothing about structural shocks, which is part of the current story). I don’t actually think this conclusion leads to an ability to dismiss either the view of Krugman, or the views of Mankiw – given that they ultimately have different beliefs on what is the proper description of the current events we are facing …

Labour suggests breaking mortgage contracts

It appears that the Labour party has decided that, in some cases, contracts shouldn’t be enforced. Phil Goff has suggested that people should be able to easily break out of their fixed rate contracts to jump on a lower interest rate.

I tell you what, while we’re at it why don’t we also make it that employers can break contracts and make employees reapply for their jobs when wage rates are falling (when unemployment is high)? Why don’t we make it the contracts are only a suggestion and have no actual legal force in setting the price and quantity in a transaction.

I’ll tell you why – because contracts act as a mechanism to prevent “hold-up” between agents. It allows trade to happen in places where issues of bargaining power prevent efficient trade.

People committed to a mortgage in knowledge of the costs and risks – why should we suddenly make banks pay for that? If the government goes around intervening in contracts, will the banks be as willing to loan to people who want to buy homes anymore?

Wow, I’m glad that we don’t have Labour in charge in this tough economic climate …

Update:  Anti-Dismal covers here.  He provides a tighter argument for hold-up than my rant 😉

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