Title: Monetary Policy
1Monetary Policy
- Part 1. The Monetary Policy Rule
2Role of monetary policy
- Role of monetary policy is to provide a nominal
anchor to control inflation and inflation
expectations. This should be done at a minimum
cost in terms of output fluctuations. - Objective reflected in Bank of England Act. .
. to deliver price stability (as defined by the
Governments inflation target) and, subject to
this objective, to support the Governments
economic policy, including objectives for growth
and employment
33 equation model IS-PC-MR
- Many monetary policy issues can be analysed in a
3-equation model of economy - IS curve determines the relationship between
the real interest rate and aggregate demand - Phillips curve determines trade-off between
output (unemployment) and inflation - Monetary rule determines how central bank sets
interest rates to hit inflation target given the
central banks preferences and constraints it
faces
4IS curve
In absence of shocks, central bank targets the
neutral interest rater a/ß, consistent with
zero output gap and inflation at target
5Phillips curve
6Central bank loss functions
Loss function L (p pT)2 ?y2
?1
?lt1
?gt1
An inflation-averse central bank is characterised
by a lower ? ?0 ? strict inflation targeting
(inflation nutter) ?gt0 ? flexible inflation
targeting
Source Carlin Soskice, p49
7Transmission mechanism
Current monetary policy affects the output gap
after one year the output gap, in turn, affects
inflation after one year
Source Carlin Soskice, p154
8Optimal policy under inflation targeting
- Policy problem is to set the instrument rate to
minimise the loss function subject to the
constraint given by Phillips curve. Set up
Lagrangean - H (p pT)2 ?y2 ?(p pT dy)
- Lagrange multiplier ? measures the cost if the
central bank deviates from its optimal solution.
Minimise the Lagrangean with respect to the state
variables y and p - ?H/?y 2?y d? 0 ? ?2?y/d?H/?p 2(p
pT) ? 0 ? ? 2(p pT) - p pT ?y/d monetary rule
9The monetary rule (MR)
To construct MR line, take a Phillips curve and
find central banks best output-inflation
combination along PC MR shows adjustment back to
equilibrium output at target inflation after a
shock
Source Carlin Soskice, p145
10Slope of monetary rule
Monetary rule flatter when Phillips curve steep
(large d) and when central bank more averse to
inflation (small ?)
Source Carlin Soskice, p148
11The IS-PC-MR model
Loss function(1) L (p pT)2 ?y2 IS
curve(2) y a ßr eD Phillips curve(3)
p pT dy eS Monetary rule(4) p pT ?y
d
r
rs
IS
y
p
VPC
PC(pe2)
pT2
MR
0
y
0
12Six things to remember
- Equilibrium level of output determines position
of vertical Phillips curve (VPC) - Monetary rule (MR) line cuts VPC at inflation
target - Central banks preferences in loss function
determine shape of loss ellipses and affect slope
of MR line - Slope of Phillips curve also affects slope of MR
line - Interest rate sensitivity of aggregate demand
determines slope of IS curve - Central bank adjusts interest rate relative to
neutral interest rate must always analyse
whether this has shifted, eg as a result of a
shift in IS curve or due to a change in
equilibrium level of output
13Inflation shock and monetary rule
Suppose an inflation shock takes economy from A
to B. Central bank chooses r which corresponds
to C on the Phillips curve and C on the IS
curve. Economy adjusts back over time to Z.
Source Carlin Soskice, p83
14Optimal monetary policy in response to shocks
- (5) y d eS d2 ?
- (6) p pT ? eS d2 ?
- (7) rOPT a 1 eD d eS
optimal instrument rule ß ß
ß(d2 ?) - Optimal response to demand shock does not depend
on preferences ? optimal response to supply
shock does
15Taylor rule
- Taylor (1993) found that US monetary policy could
reasonably be characterised by the following
interest rate rulei r p 0.5y 0.5(p
pT)i is federal funds ratep is annual rate of
inflation (Taylor uses GDP deflator)y is output
gap ( 100(YY)/Y)Y is real GDPY is trend
real GDPr is equilibrium real rate (assumed
to be 2)pT is target inflation rate (assumed to
be 2)
16Taylor rule and US federal funds rate
Source Taylor (1993), p204
17Simple interest rate rules
- r Fxwhere F is a coefficient matrix and x are
variables of the model - Coefficients not derived by minimising loss
function. Rules of thumb e.g Taylor rule - (8) r r ?p(p pT) ?yy
- Graphically, the Taylor rule gives an upward
sloping interest rate line in r-y space. In p-y
space, the Taylor rule leads to a downwards
sloping aggregate demand function -
18Taylor rule response to shocks
- (9) y ß?p eS
1 eD 1ß?ydß?p
1ß?ydß?p - (10) p pT 1ß?p eS
d eD 1ß?ydß?p
1ß?ydß?p - (11) rTR a ?p eS
d?p?y eD ß 1ß?ydß?p
1ß?ydß?p - Taylor rule depends on structural parameters ß
and d as well as the TR parameters ?y and ?p - Sub-optimal response to demand shocks
19Comparing target rule with instrument rule
- Targeting ruleVar(y) d 2 Var(eS)
d2 ? - Var(ppT) ? 2 Var(eS)
d2 ? - Instrument rule
- Var(y) ß?p 2 Var(eS)
1 2Var(eD) 1ß?ydß?p
1ß?ydß?p - Var(ppT) 1ß?y 2 Var(eS) d
2Var(eD) 1ß?ydß?p
1ß?ydß?p
20Taylor curve
Var(y)
?0
Taylor curve
Feasible but inefficient trade-offs
Taylor rule
?0.5
Trade-offs not feasible
?1
Var(p)
21Time inconsistency and inflation bias
There will be an inflation bias if central bank
tries to target output above the equilibrium
level.
Source Carlin Soskice, p162
22Solutions to time inconsistency problem
- Time inconsistency arises under following
circumstances(i) central bank has over-ambitious
output target (yTgt0)(ii) wage and price setters
have rational expectations(iii) central bank
uses a rule-based reaction function but operates
with discretion, ie it chooses its desired level
of output after inflation expectations have been
formed - Solutions(i) central bank independence(ii)
reputation building
23Further reading
- Carlin and Soskice, Macroeconomics, Chapters 2,
5 - For an overview of some of the practical issues
relating to the conduct of monetary policy under
inflation targeting, seeKing, M (2005),
Monetary policy practice ahead of theory, Bank
of England Quarterly Bulletin, Summer 2005,
pp226-236http//www.bankofengland.co.uk/publicati
ons/quarterlybulletin/qb0502.pdf - For a discussion of recent research in to
time-inconsistent monetary policies, seeDennis,
R (2003), Time inconsistent monetary policies
recent research, FRBSF Economic Letter, 2003-10 - http//www.frbsf.org/publications/economics/lette
r/2003/el2003-10.html