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Chapter 21 Conduct of Monetary Policy

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Foreign-Exchange Markets. The foreign-exchange markets rarely, if ever, ... Typically, six months must pass before it can identify the need to change policy. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 21 Conduct of Monetary Policy


1
Chapter 21Conduct of Monetary Policy
2
Official Goals for Monetary Policy
  • By law, the Fed is supposed to seek
  • Stable prices
  • High employment
  • High output
  • Rapid economic growth
  • But monetary policy cant on average raise
  • Employment
  • Output
  • The growth rate
  • So the Feds actual and official goals must
    differ.

3
Actual Goals of Monetary Policy
  • The Fed has three primary goals
  • A low but positive inflation rate (its
    interpretation of stable prices)
  • A low variance of the inflation rate p around its
    target p
  • A low variance of log output y around its
    long-run growth path y

4
Feds Primary Goals in Symbols
  • Economists model the Fed as minimizing
  • w var(pp) (1w)var(yy)
  • 0 lt w lt 1
  • A larger w means that the Fed is relatively
  • More concerned about deviations of the inflation
    rate from its target
  • Less concerned about deviations of output from
    its growth path

5
Financial Stability
  • The Fed is also a central actor in the financial
    markets.
  • It seeks to accomplish its primary goals without
    disrupting financial markets.
  • So it usually makes gradual and infrequent
    changes in its target funds rate.

6
Lender of Last Resorts
  • Liquid financial markets are essential for the
    Fed to achieve its goals.
  • Congress has given it powerful tools for serving
    as a lender of last resorts.
  • During the liquidity crisis, the Fed has
    interpreted its powers very broadly and
    creatively, lending not only to sound banks but
    also to a wide spectrum of sound financial firms.
  • In a few case, it has even lent to unsound firms
    that would otherwise have gone bankrupt.

7
Foreign-Exchange Markets
  • The foreign-exchange markets rarely, if ever,
    affect what the Fed does.
  • Its unstated policy is one of benign neglect.
  • In other words, it lets the dollar freely float.

8
Major Problems
  • It is difficult for the Fed to achieve its
    primary goals for two reasons
  • Information lags. Typically, six months must pass
    before it can identify the need to change policy.
  • Lags in effect or impact lags. Long lags exist
    between when it takes an action and when the
    action has appreciable effects.

9
Case Study Information Lags
  • The US economy began to weaken markedly in May
    2000.
  • Industrial production and employment began to
    decline in May and continued to do so for the
    next two years.
  • The Fed continued to fight inflation by keeping
    the funds rate high indeed, by increasing it
    some more.
  • It changed direction only in December 2000.
  • The recession began officially in January 2001.

10
Lags in Effect
  • About six months must pass before a change in the
    funds rate affects output, and the peak effect
    takes about 18 months.
  • The lags for inflation are even longer
  • A year before any effect occurs
  • Two to four years before the peak effect occurs.

11
How the Fed ShouldSet the Funds Rate
  • John Taylor is a well-known economist who teaches
    at Stanford and has worked in both Bush
    Administrations.
  • He has proposed that the Fed set the funds rate
    iff according to the rule
  • iff a p b(pp) c(yy)
  • a, b and c are coefficients, which in his example
    were a 2 and b c 0.5 but might be set as
    some other positive numbers.

12
Explanation of the Taylor Rule
  • Suppose that the inflation rate increases above
    its target. What should the Fed do if it wishes
    to bring the inflation rate back down?
  • Answer It must raise the real funds rate to
    restrain spending.
  • To increase the real funds rate, it must increase
    the nominal funds rate by more than the inflation
    rate increases since
  • r i pe

13
Taylor Principle
  • So b must be positive in
  • iff a p b(pp) c(yy)
  • If b were negative, the real funds rate would
    decline, stimulating spending and fueling
    inflation still more.
  • The idea that the nominal funds rate should move
    more than one-for-one with the inflation rate is
    called the Taylor Principle.

14
Output
  • Suppose that the economy falls into a recession
    i.e., yy becomes negative. What should the Fed
    do to push yy back toward zero?
  • Answer The Fed should reduce the real and
    nominal funds rate in order to stimulate
    spending.
  • So c should be positive in
  • iff a p b(pp) c(yy).

15
What the Fed Actually Does
  • The Taylor Rule is not merely a plausible policy
    for the Fed to follow but also what it has
    approximately done since at least 1960.
  • Specifically,
  • 1960-1979 iff 1.0 p .3(p3.5) 1(yy)
  • 1980-1998 iff 2.2 p .7(p1.5) .3(yy)
  • Note that b lt 0 in the period 1960-1979.

16
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17
Importance of b gt 0
  • b lt 0
  • Real interest rate falls when inflation rises
  • Result Instability
  • b gt 0
  • Real interest rate rises when inflation rises
  • Result Stability
  • Fact b lt 0 before 1980 b gt 0 since then

18
Instability
  • Many economists think that in the period
    1960-1979 the inflation rate was high and output
    was unusually volatile because the Fed did not
    then respect the Taylor Principle i.e., b was
    negative.
  • Many other countries also had this problem.
  • We conclude with plots that provide some evidence
    for this view.

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21
Other Countries
  • Many other countries did not respect Taylors
    Principle before the 1980s and did so afterwards.
  • Those countries also had high inflation rates and
    unstable GDP before the 1980s and lower inflation
    rates and more stable GPD afterwards.
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