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Outline of Talk

The Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Independence: The First ten Years Alec Chrystal Professor of Money and Banking Head of the Faculty of Finance, Cass Business School. Outline of Talk. UK monetary policy has been delegated to the MPC of the Bank of England for a decade.

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Outline of Talk

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  1. The Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Independence: The First ten YearsAlec ChrystalProfessor of Money and BankingHead of the Faculty of Finance, Cass Business School

  2. Outline of Talk • UK monetary policy has been delegated to the MPC of the Bank of England for a decade. • The policy outcome have been excellent, but is this due to good decisions by the MPC? • In part, probably, but it cannot all be down to MPC as outcomes have been similar in many other countries. • AND it is likely that most of the gains have come from regime credibility rather than from the policy decisions themselves. • Actual policy decisions are unlikely to have had much impact on the economy. • The anchoring of inflation expectations has done most of the work. • Finally we discuss what could go wrong and what steps are needed to guarantee that credibility is maintained in future.

  3. The end of macroeconomics? • The outcomes discussed are relevant to several long running debates in macroeconomics: • Optimal stabilisation policy • Rules versus discretion • Credibility and time inconsistency • Political business cycles • Monetary targets etc • Central bank independence • The recent institutional design has benefited from all these debates and the policy successes have almost certainly killed them stone dead.

  4. The Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) • The MPC has 9 members • Five are internal to the bank: The Governor, two deputy governors, the director of market operations, and the chief economist. • Four are externals appointed for three year terms: currently two academics, and two ex-private sector economists. • Each has one vote and the Governor has the casting vote in the event of a tie. • Each is personally accountable for his or her own decisions to Parliament.

  5. How interest rates are set • Until the end of 2003, MPC set interest rates to meet the 2.5% RPIX inflation target set by the Chancellor. • RPIX = RPI minus impact of interest rates (via mortgages etc) • Now the target is 2.0% inflation of the CPI index (which used to be called HICP) • MPC takes rate decision each month and has one day of data briefing and two days of analysis. They meet more often during the quarterly forecast round. • Announcement at noon on 1st Thursday of each month. • Inflation Report and new forecast every 3 months. • Minutes published two weeks after meeting. • Votes are published with minutes. • The target is symmetrical and the Governor has to write an open letter to the Chancellor if inflation is >1% above or below target explaining why and what will be done about it.

  6. What interest rate is set and how is it done? • Until May 2006, the rate set was the rate on two week “repo”. • REPO = sale and repurchase agreement. • Bank of England would only lend to money markets on a secured basis and only deal with acceptable counter-parties. • Since May 2006 the Bank pays interest on commercial banks’ deposits at the Central Bank. • The “official bank rate” is this interest rate. • There is a rate above this at which banks can borrow from the Bank of England.

  7. What factors influence decisions? • Key influence is balance of AD relative to AS • AD is made up of private consumption, investment, government consumption and the balance of trade (C+I+G+X-IM) • AS depends in long-run on trend growth in capacity (potential GDP). • In short run, trends in wages, and other input costs are relevant, as are forward looking surveys. • They are briefed on: the world economy, monetary developments, labour market, macro data (C, I, G, X, IM), prices, market information. • The Bank publishes every three months a “fan chart” “projection” of inflation and GDP growth. • The Bank’s forecasting model is published. • You can watch Press conference on web cast.

  8. Inflation and GDP growth projections • The MPC make a policy decision in light of alternative projections and only publish the ones consistent with policy decision. • Up to August 2004 projections assumed constant policy rate (so they were not true forecasts). • Since August 2004 projections assume market-based forward interest rates after the current period. • MPC targets inflation two years ahead and projections used to go up to 2 years ahead but since August 2004 they project to a 3 year horizon. • Virtually all inflation projections are on target at the two year horizon. • NOTE: Inflation date are never revised but GDP data are subject to substantial revisions.

  9. May 1997 Inflation Report

  10. August 1997 Inflation Report

  11. November 1997 Inflation Report

  12. February 1998 Inflation Report

  13. May 1998 Inflation Report

  14. August 1998 Inflation Report

  15. November 1998 Inflation Report

  16. February 1999 Inflation Report

  17. May 1999 Inflation Report

  18. August 1999 Inflation Report

  19. November 1999 Inflation Report

  20. February 2000 Inflation Report

  21. May 2000 Inflation Report

  22. August 2000 Inflation Report

  23. November 2000 Inflation Report

  24. February 2001 Inflation Report

  25. May 2001 Inflation Report

  26. August 2001 Inflation Report

  27. November 2001 Inflation Report

  28. February 2002 Inflation Report

  29. May 2002 Inflation Report

  30. UK RPIX inflation. August 2002 Inflation Report Source: August Inflation Report 2002

  31. November 2002 Inflation report

  32. February 2003 Inflation Report

  33. May 2003 Inflation Report

  34. August 2003 Inflation Report

  35. November 2003 Inflation Report

  36. February 2004 Inflation Report

  37. CPI projection, February 2004 Inflation Report

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