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Theory Guest Lecture 9 Monetary economics

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Title: Theory Guest Lecture 9 Monetary economics


1
Theory Guest Lecture 9Monetary economics
  • Introductory Economics for the Treasury
  • Dr. Paul Frijters

2
Contents
  • Basic stats on money flows, interest rates, and
    inflation rates.
  • Financial markets monetary neutrality
    hypothesis, efficient market hypothesis, bubbles,
    contagion hypothesis, Purchasing Power Parity
    theory of exchange rates.
  • Interest rate policy demand management, short
    term investment, inflation targeting.
  • Inflation seniorage tax, price distortions,
    indexing issues.

3
Basic stats interest rates
4
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5
Inflation
6
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7
Equity
8
US debt
9
Capital flows to emerging markets
10
World capital flows
11
A sense of size
12
Main points from these stats
  • World interest rates and inflation rates are
    currently very low.
  • The main capital flow is from developed countries
    to the US.
  • The main flow to the developing world is
    increasingly towards Asia, at the expense of
    Latin America.
  • Capital assets and flows are enormous, dwarfing
    the size of any individual economy.
  • The US and the EU have relatively speaking an
    enormous amount of capital.

13
Financial market key ideas
  • The monetary neutrality hypothesis holds that
    prices do not matter in any way to the real
    economy. What matters in this view is simply
    productivity deriving from the various capital
    stocks (including institutional and social
    capital).
  • Prediction an across-the board price increase
    (inflation) has no effect on anyones behaviour
    and policy to influence the stock market is
    useless because the stock market only reflects
    the real economy but doesnt affect it.

14
implications
  • 1. In the strong version what happens on the
    financial markets does not matter at all for
    underlying economic growth and attention on it is
    wasted.
  • 2. In the weak version one only need worry about
    extreme cases where price changes do have real
    effects, including mainly hyperinflation and
    large asset bubbles. One then worries about
    transmission mechanisms from price changes to
    the real economy.
  • Note the weak version is probably the dominant
    economic opinion of the moment.

15
EMH efficient market hypothesis
  • The efficient market hypothesis holds that the
    price of any asset at any point in time reflects
    all the available information of investors at
    that time, i.e. the price is a full-information
    signal.
  • Main prediction if this is true, then the only
    reason for the price to change is if truly new
    information arrives about productivity (leading
    to real business cycles). The price path should
    thus be a random walk, also known as a unit
    root process or a Wiener process. In other words
    nothing observable today should be informative
    about the change in price tomorrow.

16
implications
  • 1. One cannot second guess the market because it
    reflects the knowledge of millions of materialist
    investors. Hence a monkey picking a random set of
    shares should do just as well as any expert
    investor.
  • 2. The aggregate market value of stocks is a
    best prediction of future aggregate profit of
    companies and thus of economic growth. Similarly,
    long-run bond yields reveal the market
    expectation of future interest rates.
  • 3. If one picks a set of assets whose value is
    determined by different underlying processes,
    then one can reduce the risk of bad outcomes
    risk-pooling is about picking a bundle of
    different assets with different information
    shocks.

17
.
  • 4. (because the price reflects the true value)
    if the underlying asset has no productive
    investment side to it, then the price of it
    should not increase in the long run. Gold in
    particular is thus only a smart investment in the
    short run.
  • 5. If the government tries to maintain an
    unrealistic price (for instance for an exchange
    rate), then eventually investors will bankrupt
    whomever tries to maintain the unrealistic price.
    Examples the UK crash out of the Exchange Rate
    Mechanism, and perhaps the Asian Financial
    crisis.
  • Note virtually no-one believes the strong
    version of the EMH (because it is logically
    inconsistent it costs resources to find
    information, so it can not be the case that
    no-one has an incentive to actively find the
    information), but its weaker version where prices
    in the long run to reflect value and price shocks
    are mainly information shocks is adopted by most
    economists.

18
Bubbles
  • (also known as sunspot equilibria, animal
    spirits, self-confirming equilibria)
  • The art of investing is guessing better than the
    aggregate investor what the aggregate investor
    will think tomorrow (Keynes)
  • This entails the notion that the price of assets
    can for a long time be different from its true
    underlying value (the fundamentals) because
    everyone believes it to be so.
  • Examples 1987 stock market crash, 1980s UK
    housing bubble, 2000 IT stock market rally, 2004
    Australian housing bubble?

19
Implications
  • 1. It would make sense to interfere with the
    asset markets if one believes the volatility to
    have bad real consequences.
  • Examples of actual policies cease trading if the
    slide is too big asset buying by the government
    if the slide is too big interest rate increases
    to discourage borrowing to buy assets if the
    increase is too big (Australia).
  • Note many believe in the possibility of bubbles,
    but also believe it almost impossible to tell
    when a bubble is forming. Only with hindsight do
    we dare to.

20
whats bad about volatility?
  • The argument if you can insure yourself against
    many forms of insecurity via options and future
    markets, then why would one be worried about
    volatility?
  • Answer 1 insurance costs extra to the extent of
    the profit of the insurer.
  • Answer 2 for many big-ticket shocks there is
    still no insurance.
  • Answer 3 the very presence of volatility in
    combination with asymmetric information may lead
    to a lemons market problem. Leading to
    under-investment. This requires a degree of
    irrationality though.

21
Financial contagion
  • Many version of this idea, but the basic notion
    is that unrealistic pessimism may move from one
    market to another.
  • Main example the financial market crises in Asia
    in the late 90s where whole stock markets and
    currencies crashed in several countries
    consecutively. Indonesia still hasnt recovered.
    The argument is whether this was actually
    contagion or simply new information about actual
    circumstances (such as the bad debts of
    Indonesian companies).

22
Implications
  • (like with bubbles) if the volatility has real
    effects then it makes sense to interfere.
  • How?
  • - Tobin tax a small tax on financial
    transactions, which would discourage very
    short-term loans and thus excessive betting.
  • - An international guarantor of currencies and
    stock markets, like the IMF, to increase
    credibility of prices.
  • - Having futures market where investors can
    insure against shocks. Some however argue that
    these futures markets increase volatility.

23
Purchasing power parity
  • Purchasing power parity holds that in the long
    run, exchange rates should be such that the same
    tradeable good should cost exactly the same thing
    in all countries.
  • Main prediction prices for tradeable goods
    should become more and more the same with the
    demise of trade barriers and transportation
    costs. The Big Mac index (index of the price of
    a Big Mac in various countries) shows only very
    weak convergence.

24
Implications
  • 1. You cant buck the market if you maintain an
    exchange rate or tax regime that does not respect
    PPP, it will crash eventually. What makes it
    crash? Arbitrage and speculation.
  • 2. The only prices that will vary consistently
    over countries are non-tradeables, such as land,
    labour, housing, scenery, perishables, and
    anything non-traded that is produced with the
    former as inputs.
  • Note intuitively, most economists believe PPP to
    have to hold in the long run, but barriers,
    transportation, and trade costs leave a lot of
    room for exchange rates to move in.

25
Interest rates
  • What does the domestic interest rate affect?
  • 1. The price of borrowing domestically and thus
    investment and mortgages.
  • 2a. The return to savings domestically and thus
    saving rates and, more importantly in the short
    run, the international capital flow towards this
    country.
  • 2b. The costs of holding money in ones pockets
    or, more generally, the costs of holding liquid
    assets (M1 and M2 the higher the M, the less
    liquid the asset). This in turn means interest
    rates affect inflation.

26
Demand management via interest rates
  • Setting

Recession due to pessimism
Normal
farmer Baker
farmer Baker
Engineer
Engineer
Basic idea the baker will borrow even if he is
pessimistic when interest rates are low, thus
preventing a break down.
27
implications
  • 1. One can stimulate the economy by having low
    interest rates one essentially tries to increase
    the incentive to invest in future production
    rather than to lend to others. This is the reason
    for the US fed to have a clear policy of
    extremely low interest rates.
  • Problem in the long run, this is not
    sustainable someone somewhere in the world has
    to save the money that is invested. Hence
    interest rates (especially rates determining
    lending to others) in the long run have to be
    equal to the return on productive investment
    because otherwise no-one will lend to anyone else
    for non-productive purposes.
  • Hence in the long run, government does not
    control interest rates, especially not in an
    active international capital market.

28
Interest rate convergence in the G7?
29
Short-term investment
  • Issue when domestic interest rate is high
    relative to foreign interest rates, this gives
    foreign investors an incentive to buy local
    currency and obtain these higher interest rates.
  • Prediction international capital flows in
    massive amounts to the places with higher
    interest rates. Is indeed to a large degree
    observed.
  • Problem this interest-rate shopping is often not
    in the form of long-term investment in companies,
    but often investment in bonds or accounts,
    leading to potentially very high volatility if
    interest rates are uncertain (it goes out of the
    country just as quick as it came in).

30
implications
  • 1. Being predictable about interest rates is very
    important to prevent volatility. This is one
    reason for central bank independence, where one
    relies on the benevolence of the central bankers.
  • 2. Domestic reasons to manipulate interest rates
    can be dwarfed by an international response (in
    the short run, interest rate increases may
    actually increase local capital instead of
    decreasing it).
  • 3. Exchange rates will tend to appreciate at the
    same rate as interest rates are higher than the
    foreign interest rates.

31
Inflation targeting
  • Idea because higher interest rates have strong
    reducing effects on borrowing, inflationary
    pressures get reduced with higher interest rates.
  • Prediction inflation can be reduced by higher
    interest rates. This indeed has turned out to be
    the case in recent decades.
  • Problem inflation can also be increased by
    increasing M1 and M2 (money printing). Hence both
    the monetary base and interest rates affect the
    same thing and thus must be coordinated.

32
implication
  • 1. Interest rates are used to reach target levels
    of inflation in many countries. The EU-central
    bank has this in its statues, as does the
    Australian equivalent.
  • 2. Because borrowing involves many future
    activities, credibility of interest rates is
    important for them to have effect. This again is
    a reason for central bank independence.
  • 3. The increase in M1 and M2 is usually tied to
    the increase in real production.

33
Inflation
  • Inflation arises when the price of a fixed amount
    of goods and services goes up.
  • Definition and measurement issues.
  • Real impacts of inflation
  • - Inflation as taxation seniorage.
  • - Relative price shocks signal distortion.

34
Definition issues
  • The ideal measure of inflation means asking how
    much more money one needs to obtain the same
    welfare now than it took in an earlier period.
  • This means the main measurement issues are about
    quality (current goods are better), and
    composition (what is consumed over time changes).
  • Two basic types of practical indices the Paasche
    index and the Laspeyres index.

35
  • The Paasche index compares the cost of purchasing
    the current basket of goods and services with the
    cost of purchasing the same basket in an earlier
    period. The prices are weighted by the quantities
    of the current period. This means that each time
    the index is calculated, the weights are
    different.
  • The Laspeyres index compares the cost of
    purchasing the basket of goods and services in an
    earlier period with the cost of purchasing the
    same basket today.
  • Note the Paasche index requires updating the
    weights and is thus more data intensive. It is
    also more responsive though to changes in tastes
    and substitution effects. This means it usually
    gives lower estimates of inflation.

36
.
  • Issues
  • 1. What to include into the relevant bundle of
    goods? This depends on whom the inflation measure
    is for. Thats why there are several inflation
    measures (for the consumer, with or without
    housing, for manufacturing, an import price
    index, etc.)
  • 2. How to deal with changing composition and
    quality? Sometimes, quality indices are developed
    (e.g. with computers), sometimes the composition
    of the baskets changes greatly. Political
    considerations are often important here because
    many wages and benefits are linked to inflation
    measures.

37
Real impacts of inflation
  • How could inflation have real impact?
  • Inflation can be a tax. Consider an initial
    situation where consumers hold 100 in savings.
    Then, the government prints another 100. That
    means there are 200 to buy the same goods,
    meaning inflation of 100. What effectively has
    happened is that half the previous real value of
    the savings has been taxed and is now at the
    discretion of the government.
  • This tax is called seniorage and is one of the
    easiest taxes to collect. It taxes savings more
    than production though (because one can index
    salary, but one cannot index savings because
    indexing savings would merely mean the borrower
    would have to pay the tax).

38
implications
  • - seniorage tax discourages domestic savings and
    promotes putting the saving abroad, called
    capital flight.
  • - a domestic investors would have to bid an
    interest rate that is greater than the inflation
    rate, meaning the investors start bearing the
    tax.
  • - over time seniorage tax can be avoided by
    adopting other means of exchange, such as a
    foreign currency.

39
Other real effects
  • Signal distortion precisely because an
    anticipated seniorage tax can be avoided by
    capital flight, a government has an incentive to
    print money unexpectedly.
  • This means inflation comes in bursts, leading to
    great volatility.
  • Information about the bursts is not equally fast
    in all areas of the economy (some prices such as
    often traded commodities can adapt faster than
    others such as not-often traded commodities).
  • The information strain becomes too great and
    relative prices start to fluctuate wildly,
    leading to a loss of specialisation and thus
    economic downturn.

40
Comments on exchange rates
  • The higher the exchange rate, the richer one as a
    country is, but the higher priced ones goods are
    abroad.
  • An ever appreciating exchange rate is thus the
    result of being successful on the foreign
    markets.
  • A depreciating one does in the longer run help
    exports but is the result of being uncompetitive.
  • Depreciation brings in inflation from abroad
    (imports increase in price).
  • In the short run, various contracts are fixed and
    changes in the exchange rate have no effect on
    trade.
  • In the short run, exchange rates are almost
    entirely dictated by (large) capital flows. In
    the long run, trade flows matter also.
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