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Monetary Policy & Interest Rates

Monetary Policy & Interest Rates. Central Banks. What is a central bank?. Central banks began as banks to the government. Today controls the level of liquidity by operating the payment system. Control the printing of notes/currency Control the accounts used for interbank payments. .

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Monetary Policy & Interest Rates

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  1. Monetary Policy & Interest Rates

  2. Central Banks

  3. What is a central bank? • Central banks began as banks to the government. • Today controls the level of liquidity by operating the payment system. • Control the printing of notes/currency • Control the accounts used for interbank payments. Base Liquidity Cash + Reserve Accounts Monetary Aggregates Cash + Deposit Accounts Used by banks to Back up deposits

  4. Money SupplyThe stock of the medium of exchange.

  5. Money & Inflation: 1975-1994

  6. Policy Framework Japan Objective: Bank of Japan Act Article 2Currency and monetary control by the Bank of Japan shall be aimed at achieving price stability, thereby contributing to the sound development of the national economy ECB Objective “The primary objective of the ECB’s monetary policy is to maintain price stability. The ECB aims at inflation rates of below, but close to, 2% over the medium term.” Look forward to Inflation Targeting

  7. KEY GOAL OF CENTRAL BANKS: • PRICE STABILITY HKMA Link

  8. Great Inflation of the 70’s & 80’s

  9. Troubles with Inflation Unpredictable inflation generates risk for: - borrowers and lenders - workers and employers High inflation generates losses of purchasing power for people who hold money. Money is a tool of liquidity, becomes less useful when subject to a high inflation tax.

  10. Hyperinflation: Inflation reaching growth of 50% per month.

  11. Hyperinflation in China Dynamics of Hyperinflation in China 1945-1949 TW Hu, 1970 1945 1947 1949

  12. Monetary Policy Framework • Goals – Overall objectives • Anchors – Benchmarks of Performance • Policy Instruments – Day-to-day operations • Transmission Mechanism – How central bank activities affect the economy

  13. Nominal Anchors • Nominal Anchors act as the measure of currency value maintenance which orient the activities of the central bank. • Exchange Rate Targets: Maintain value relative to another currency or basket of currencies. • Inflation Targets: Maintain value relative to a basket of goods.

  14. Importance of Nominal Anchors • Commitment to nominal anchor can stabilize the value of money and implement low and stable inflation. • Visible, credible commitment to nominal anchor implements low inflation expectations in financial markets and private sector.

  15. Adjusting Interest Rates for Inflation • Payoff on 1 year, 1 period loan is $1+i, but what is the purchasing power of the payoff? • Convert the payoff into the prices prevailing in initial loan year by dividing the pay-off by the trajectory of prices. • Inflation adjusted interest rate is sometime referred to as real interest rate.

  16. Monetary Policy and the Fisher Effect In the long-run, real interest rate unaffected by monetary policy. • High long term inflation path translates into high inflationary expectations. • High inflationary expectations lead to high interest rates.

  17. Fisher Effect: OECD Economies Great Inflation of 1970’s

  18. Inflation Targeting

  19. What is IT? • Using price of goods as a nominal anchor. • Set specific numerical targets for future inflation • Report regular forecasts of expected inflation under current economic conditions. • Set interest rate policy to push future inflation back into bounds.

  20. Target the Forecasts • Monetary policy decisions must be made on the basis of expected inflation because policy does not have immediate impact on inflation. • Variety of approaches toward forecasting inflation including statistical and theoretical modeling. • Stabilizing expected inflation stabilizes interest rates by limiting Fisher effect.

  21. List of Inflation Targeting CountriesRoseA Stable International Monetary System Emerges: Inflation Targeting is Bretton Woods, Reversed

  22. Operating Instruments • On a day to day basis, most central banks will choose to set either interbank interest rates or exchange rates. • Central bank provides liquidity for interbank payments and can determine interest rates in the interbank market. • Central bank can also govern the degree of liquidity in forex market (which is mostly made up of banks).

  23. RBI Report of the Working Group on Monetary Policy...

  24. Capital Market Rates Money Market Rates Government Bond Rates Corporate Bond Rates Lending Rates Interbank Rates Treasury Bill Rates Commercial Paper Rates Negotiable CD Rates Policy Rates Maturity Above 1 Year Maturity 1 Day to 1 Year Usually, price of liquidity issued at regular intervals by central bank

  25. Transmission Mechanism Long-term Rates Domestic Demand Policy Rates Short-term Rates Asset Prices (Stocks/RE) Inflation & GDP External Demand Exchange Rates

  26. Transmission Lags • Monetary policy works by changing decision making of private individuals. • Individual decision making is characterized by inertia. • Effects of monetary policy not fully felt until a year.

  27. Bank of England Estimates of Effect of Interest Rate

  28. Raising policy interest rates reduces liquidity in money markets and raises short-term rates. • Less liquidity for inventory or credit purchases. • Raising money market rates attracts liquidity from stock, RE and bond markets reducing stock and RE prices and raising LT bond rates. • Higher LT rates reduces corporate investment and reduced wealth hurts • Raising money market rates attracts cash from other economies, leading to appreciation of domestic currency. • Expensive domestic currency makes net exports less competitive.

  29. Short-term Stabilization • When short-term output is below trend, inflation tends to be decelerating. Stablilizing inflation can also stabilze the business cycle

  30. Watching Central Banks • Monetary policy and market expectations of monetary policy have strong impact on stock and bond markets. Link Link

  31. Exchange Rate Anchors

  32. De Facto Classification of Exchange Rate Regimes and Monetary Policy Frameworks

  33. Why Exchange Rate Stability? Why Exchange Rate Anchor? • Easily measurable & visible benchmark for maintaining value of the currency. • Stabilizes international trade and finance. Why Exchange Rate Instrument? • Forex markets most liquid market in frontier markets. Link

  34. Fixed exchange rates stabilize both the value of the domestic currency relative to the anchor currency but also stabilizes the domestic interest relative to the interest rate of the anchor currency.

  35. Exchange Rate MisalignmentOver-valuation/Undervaluationof Currency • Exchange rate misalignment: when price of currency differs from relative prices of goods making domestic goods relatively cheap/competitive or relatively expensive/uncompetitive Exchange rate misalignment tends to be resolved through either 1) exchange rate adjustment; or 2) inflation/deflation in domestic prices.

  36. Currency Wars • Developed economies believe that some Asian central banks are acting in FX markets to keep S high and undervalue currencies. • Measuring proper valuation is difficult because it is hard to determine the proper price level.

  37. Short-term measures of competitiveness • Unit labor costs – Total Labor Costs/Constant Dollar GDP • ULC is cost of wages relative to real productivity. • Unit of measure: Domestic Currency

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