FNCE 3020 Financial Markets and Institutions - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 75
About This Presentation
Title:

FNCE 3020 Financial Markets and Institutions

Description:

Central Banking and the Conduct of Monetary Policy ... Bank of England: Official bank rate. European Central Bank: Main refinancing rate ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:80
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 76
Provided by: palm8
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: FNCE 3020 Financial Markets and Institutions


1
FNCE 3020Financial Marketsand Institutions
  • Lecture 7
  • Topics
  • Central Banking and the Conduct of Monetary
    Policy
  • Impact of Central Bank Actions on Financial
    Markets

2
What are These Central Banks and Who are These
Central Bankers?
3
Why Study Central Banking?
  • Answer Central bank actions have significant
    impacts on financial markets and specifically on
  • (1) interest rates (the cost of borrowing and the
    return on investing).
  • (2) financial asset prices (stocks, bonds,
    foreign exchange)
  • Thus we need to know something about central
    banks
  • How do central banks operate in financial
    markets?
  • How can we monitor the potential for changes in
    central bank actions?
  • Understanding these issues will add to our
    understanding of (1) and (2) above.

4
Definitions of a Central Bank
  • Text book definition
  • The government agency that overseas the banking
    system and is responsible for the amount of money
    and credit supplied in the economy.
  • Other definitions
  • The entity responsible for the monetary policy
    of its country
  • The major regulatory bank in a country.
  • The government agency whose responsibilities
    include
  • the issuance of currency,
  • the administration of monetary policy, (e.g.,
    open market operations, the discount rate), and
  • engaging in transactions designed to facilitate
    healthy business interactions. (i.e., a sound
    financial system).

5
Who Runs the Central Bank?
  • In most countries -- especially in the developing
    world -- the central bank is state owned and,
    thus, has a minimal degree of autonomy from the
    government.
  • This situation, unfortunately, allows for the
    possibility of government interference in
    monetary policy.
  • In the major countries of the world, however,
    central banks generally operate independent of
    their respective governments.
  • This is designed to prevent political
    interference.
  • In reality, however, the degree of independence
    varies even among these major countries.
  • For example, some governments (e.g., the U.K.,
    Australia, and Canada) are involved in setting
    inflation targets for their central bank. The
    ECBs target is set in its mandate.
  • Switzerland is the only major central bank who
    sets its own inflation rate target without
    Government involvement.

6
Major Central Banks Independence
  • Central Bank Date of Independence
  • Federal Reserve 1913
  • Bank of England 1997
  • Bank of Japan 1998
  • European Central Bank 1999
  • Recognized date of separation from government
    influence.
  • With the passage of the Federal Reserve Act.
  • ECB independence granted in its original
    charter.

7
U.S. Central Bank The Fed
  • Except for two failed attempts (1791 and 1816),
    the U.S. operated without an effective central
    bank up until the early 20th century.
  • During this period, there were frequent economic
    recessions and financial crises in the U.S. with
    the Bank Panic of 1907 finally convincing the
    government that a central bank was necessary.
  • On December 23, 1913, Congress passed and
    President Woodrow Wilson signed into law The
    Federal Reserve Act, establishing a central bank
    for the United States.
  • The Act also called the Glass-Owen Act.
  • The 1913 Act was to provide for establishment of
    Federal reserve banks, to furnish an elastic
    currency, to afford means of rediscounting
    commercial paper, to establish a more effective
    supervision of banking in the United States, and
    for other purposes.
  • Note There are no macro economic goals in the
    1913 Act.

8
Early Post Fed Years U.S. Economic Performance
9
Changing Goals of the Federal Reserve
  • In response to the unemployment crisis of the
    Great Depression, the U.S. Congress, in February
    1946, passed the Full Employment Act
  • The Congress hereby declares that it is the
    continuing policy and responsibility of the
    Federal Government to promote maximum
    employment, production and purchasing power.
  • These become the goals of government policy (not
    just the central bank).

10
Economic Performance 1970s -80s
  • In the 1970s, global inflation becomes the major
    economic issue.
  • There were two distinct peaks 1973/74 and
    1980/81.
  • The inflation of this period is attributed to
    supply shocks to the global economy.
  • Especially oil.
  • As a result, central banks turn their attention
    to inflation and to possible inflation targets as
    a goal.

11
Changing Goals of the Federal Reserve
  • How does the Fed respond to this environment?
  • In 1977, additional mandates for the Federal
    Reserve are introduced with amendments to the
    Federal Reserve
  • The 1977 amendments required the Board of
    Governors and the FOMC to "maintain the growth of
    monetary and credit aggregates commensurate with
    the economy's long-run potential to increase
    production, so as to promote effectively the
    goals of maximum employment, stable prices, and
    moderate long-term interest rates."
  • But a specific inflation target is not identified.

12
Illustrating Central Bank Actions
  • Monetary Policy Tools (Policy Instruments)
  • (1) Open market operations
  • (2) Discount window (borrowing) facilities
  • (3) Reserve requirement adjustments
  • Operational Targets (Targets of Policy Actions)
  • Monetary aggregates (money supply)
  • Financial market variables (interest rates)
  • Macroeconomic Target (Ultimate Goals of Policy)
  • Inflation
  • Economic growth
  • Employment
  • Exchange rate

13
Monetary Policy Tools (Instruments)
  • How does a central bank (e.g., the Federal
    Reserve achieve operational targets and
    eventually its macro-economic goals?
  • Answer Through three main instruments
  • (1) Open market operations
  • Purchases and sales of U.S. Treasury and federal
    agency by the open market committee
  • While, the Federal Reserve's operational
    objective for open market operations has varied
    over the years, by 1995 the Fed began to
    explicitly state a target level for the federal
    funds rate.
  • For specific targets since 1995, see
    http//www.federalreserve.gov/fomc/fundsrate.htm

14
Fed Funds Target, June 2006 - Present
  • Date Basis Point Increase or Decrease New Level
    ()
  • 2008 Oct 29 -50 1.00
  • Oct 8 -50 1.50
  • Apr 30 -25 2.00
  • Mar 18 -75 2.25
  • Jan 30 -50 3.00
  • Jan 22 -75 3.50
  • 2007
  • Dec 11 -25 4.25
  • Oct 31 -25 4.50
  • Sept 18 -50 4.75
  • 2006 June 29 25 5.25

15
The Discount Rate (Current Rate)
  • (2) The discount rate is the interest rate
    charged to commercial banks and other depository
    institutions on loans they receive from their
    regional Federal Reserve Bank's lending facility,
    commonly referred to as the discount window.
  • Federal Reserve Banks offer three discount window
    programs to depository institutions
  • (1) primary credit, i.e., overnight, (1.25)
  • (2) secondary credit (to meet severe short term
    financial difficulties (1.75), and
  • (3) seasonal credit, i.e., to smaller
    institutions in agricultural or seasonal resort
    areas (2.0)
  • Each discount program has its own interest rate
    and all loans must be fully secured (usually with
    Treasury obligations).
  • The term discount rate is normally applied to
    the rate on primary credit loans.
  • For information on discount rates see
    http//www.frbdiscountwindow.org/index.cfm

16
Relationship of Discount Rate to Fed Funds Rate
  • Historically, the discount rate was set below the
    federal funds rate.
  • However, to discourage banks from borrowing at
    the discount window and lending it out at a
    profit in the fed funds market, the Fed required
    a bank to prove it had exhausted all other
    sources of funds first.
  • In 2003, the Fed introduced a new arrangement by
    which the discount rate would be set above the
    fed funds rate.

17
Reserve Requirements
  • (3) Reserve requirements are the amount of funds
    that a depository institution must hold in
    reserve against specified deposit liabilities.
  • Deposit liabilities consist of transaction
    accounts (e.g., demand deposits, NOW accounts,
    etc), time deposits, and eurocurrency
    liabilities.
  • Under the Monetary Control Act of 1980, the Fed
    can vary reserve requirement up to 14 on
    transaction accounts and up to 9 on other
    deposits.
  • Since December 27, 1990, non-personal time
    deposits and eurocurrency liabilities have had a
    reserve requirement of zero.
  • Savings accounts do not have reserve
    requirements.
  • Currently, the reserve requirement on transaction
    accounts varies from 3 to 10 (depending upon
    the amount).
  • Depository institutions must hold reserves in the
    form of vault cash or deposits with Federal
    Reserve Banks.

18
Monetary Control Act (MCA) of 1980
  • Before the passage of the MCA in 1980, only
    commercial banks that were members of the Federal
    Reserve System had to meet the Fed's reserve
    requirements.
  • State-chartered commercial banks that were not
    Federal Reserve members had to meet their state's
    reserve requirements, which typically were lower.
  • As a result, many commercial banks dropped their
    Federal Reserve membership in favor of state
    charters.
  • And, Federal Reserve member bank transaction
    deposits fell from nearly 85 of total U.S.
    transaction deposits in the late 1950s to 65 two
    decades later.
  • The MCA resolved this problem by authorizing the
    Fed to set reserve requirements for all
    depository institutions, regardless of Fed
    membership status.

19
Reserve Requirements, January 2008
20
Reserve Requirements as a Monetary Policy Tool
  • Since 1980, there have been only a handful of
    policy-related reserve requirement changes.
  • For example, in December 1990, the Fed cut the
    requirement on non-personal time deposits and on
    net Eurocurrency liabilities from 3 to 0.
  • The Fed noted that the cut would reduce banks'
    costs, "providing added incentive to lend to
    creditworthy borrowers.
  • In April 1992, it cut the requirement on
    transaction deposits from 12 to 10.
  • The Fed noted that its April 1992 cut in reserve
    requirements, would put banks "in a better
    position to extend credit."

21
Historical Use of Fed Policy Instruments
  • 1913 Act Major policy instrument was the
    discount facility and the discount rate.
  • Federal Reserve Act of 1913 had no provision for
    changes in reserve requirements and open market
    operations as a policy tool were not yet
    discovered.
  • When discount loans (a source of income for the
    Fed) fell in 1920, the fed purchased seasoned
    securities for income)
  • By the late 1920s Fed had discovered that there
    open market operations had an important impact on
    bank reserves.
  • Thus open market operations becomes the major Fed
    tool.

22
What Operational Variable Should a Central
Bank Target?
  • One of the issues which any central bank faces is
    what operational target should they use when
    adjusting monetary policy tools.
  • From a practical standpoint, the choice is
    between
  • A monetary aggregate such as the money supply or
  • A financial market variable such as an interest
    rate or an exchange rate

23
Historical Use of Operational Targets by the
Federal Reserve
  • In the years immediately after WW II, the Fed
    agreed to peg interest rates at very low levels
    (3/8 on Treasury bills and 2 ½ on Treasury
    bonds) to hold down the Treasurys war financing
    costs (see next slide)
  • In 1951, an agreement (called the The Accord)
    was reached between the Treasury and the Fed
    whereby the Fed would no longer peg interest
    rates.
  • In the 1950 and 1960s, the Federal Reserve
    shifted its target to money market conditions,
    and specifically short term interest rates.
  • By the 1970s, under increasing criticism from
    monetarists that central banks were unable
    control inflationary pressures, the shift was to
    the targeting of monetary aggregates,
    specifically various money supply measures (M1,
    M2, etc).

24
Short Term Interest Rates After WWII
25
Recent Record of Central Bank Operational
Targeting
  • In the 1970s, most major central banks had
    dropped interest rate targets and adopted some
    form of monetary aggregate targeting
  • Bank of England in 1973
  • Bundesbank in 1975
  • Bank of Japan in 1978
  • Federal Reserve in October 1979.
  • However, in the 1980s, central bank concern about
    the wide swings in interest rates, combined with
    their apparent inability to meet their monetary
    aggregate targets, resulted in the de-emphasis
    this monetary aggregate approach.
  • There was also growing research suggesting that
    the predictable relationship between money
    supply aggregates and economic growth had broken
    down (see next slide)
  • The monetary policy target shift, therefore, was
    to eventually focus back on an interest rate
    target.

26
Money Supply and Real GDP
27
Current Central Bank Operational Targeting
  • In July 1993, the Fed announced it was no longer
    going to use any monetary targets.
  • By the early 1990s, most major central banks had
    abandoned monetary targets in favor of some short
    term interest rate as their operational target.
  • Fed Reserve The fed funds rate (rate for
    reserves in the interbank market).
  • Bank of England Official bank rate
  • European Central Bank Main refinancing rate
  • Bank of Japan Uncollateralized overnight call
    rate

28
Central Bank Operational Target Interest Rates,
November 10, 2008 and (October 22, 2007)
  • Federal Reserve
  • Federal Funds Rate 1.00 (4.75)
  • Bank of England
  • Official bank rate 3.00 (5.75)
  • European Central Bank
  • Main refinancing rate 3.25 (4.00)
  • Bank of Japan
  • Uncollateralized overnight call rate 0.5 (0.5)

29
Recent Foreign Central Bank Interest Rate Changes
30
Does the Fed Funds Target Mean Anything Today?
31
The Federal Open Market Committee
  • Undoubtedly the most closely watch group within
    the Federal Reserve is the Federal Open Market
    Committee.
  • There are 12 members on the FOMC
  • All seven members of the Board of Governors plus
    the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New
    York and four other presidents among the
    remaining 11 Federal Reserve District Banks (see
    Appendix 1 for the Fed structure).
  • The chairman of the Board of Governors is the
    chair of the FOMC.
  • The FOMC has scheduled meetings 8 times a year
    (about every 6 weeks) although emergency
    meetings can be called anytime, and at these
    meetings
  • The FOMC makes decisions regarding the level of
    the federal funds rate.

32
How Often Do Central Banks Meet?
33
Policy Statements from the FOMC
  • At the conclusion of each FOMC meeting, the FOMC
    will issue a press release which highlights the
    meeting.
  • This statement will begin by stating what, if
    anything, the FOMC has decided to do with the
    federal funds rate.
  • This statement also reviews the current economic
    environment.
  • This statement also provides opinions as to where
    the FOMC sees the economy moving in the near term
    as well as noting any potential problem area
    (e.g., inflation, or specific sectors).
  • The statement will end with a review (breakdown)
    of the votes.
  • As such, readers look for clues as the future
    outlook for monetary policy.
  • Will policy tighten, eased up, or stayed the
    course?
  • After three weeks, the FOMC will release the full
    minutes of its meeting.
  • For a calendar of future meetings and past press
    releases and full minutes see
  • http//www.federalreserve.gov/fomc/calendars

34
FOMC Press Release Jan 30, 2008
  • The Federal Open Market Committee decided today
    to lower its target for the federal funds rate 50
    basis points to 3 percent.
  • Financial markets remain under considerable
    stress, and credit has tightened further for some
    businesses and households.  Moreover, recent
    information indicates a deepening of the housing
    contraction as well as some softening in labor
    markets.
  • The Committee expects inflation to moderate in
    coming quarters, but it will be necessary to
    continue to monitor inflation developments
    carefully.
  • Todays policy action, combined with those taken
    earlier, should help to promote moderate growth
    over time and to mitigate the risks to economic
    activity.  However, downside risks to growth
    remain.  The Committee will continue to assess
    the effects of financial and other developments
    on economic prospects and will act in a timely
    manner as needed to address those risks.
  • Voting for the FOMC monetary policy action were
    Ben S. Bernanke, Chairman Timothy F. Geithner,
    Vice Chairman Donald L. Kohn Randall S.
    Kroszner Frederic S. Mishkin Sandra Pianalto
    Charles I. Plosser Gary H. Stern and Kevin M.
    Warsh.  Voting against was Richard W. Fisher, who
    preferred no change in the target for the federal
    funds rate at this meeting.
  • In a related action, the Board of Governors
    unanimously approved a 50-basis-point decrease in
    the discount rate to 3-1/2 percent.  In taking
    this action, the Board approved the requests
    submitted by the Boards of Directors of the
    Federal Reserve Banks of Boston, New York,
    Philadelphia, Cleveland, Atlanta, Chicago, St.
    Louis, Kansas City, and San Francisco.

35
Bank of Japan Press Releases
36
ECB and Bank of England Press Releases
  • ECB http//www.ecb.int/press/html/index.en.html
  • ECB Follow-up (With Q and A) http//www.ecb.int/pr
    ess/pressconf/2008/html/index.en.html
  • Bank of England http//www.bankofengland.co.uk/pu
    blications/news/2008/index.htm

37
Importance of the Federal Funds Rate
  • The federal funds rate is the interest rate at
    which depository institutions lend reserve
    balances through the Federal Reserve system to
    other depository institutions
  • These reserve loans are essentially on an
    overnight basis.
  • Why is the federal funds rate important?
  • Because changes in the federal funds rate trigger
    a chain of events that affect
  • The amount of money and credit in the economy
    (via lending activities)
  • Other short-term (money market) interest rates,
  • Long-term interest rates,
  • Foreign exchange rates, and,
  • Ultimately, a range of economic variables,
    including employment, output, and prices of goods
    and services.

38
Federal Funds Rate 1970 - Present
39
Impact of Fed Funds Rate on Business Loan
Interest Rates (Prime Rate)
40
Impact of Fed Funds Rate on Money Market Interest
Rate (CD Rate)
41
Impact of Fed Funds Rate on Long Term Corporate
Bond Rate (Aaa Rate)
42
Impact of Fed Funds Rate on Mortgage Lending
Rate (30-Year Rate)
43
Impact of Federal Funds Rate on Dollar
44
Interest Rate Spread and Exchange Rate British
Pound
45
Interest Rate Spread and Exchange Rate European
Euro
46
Appropriate Macroeconomic Target
  • Monetary Policy Tool
  • Open market operations
  • Buying and selling Treasury securities
  • Operational Target
  • Monetary aggregates (money supply)
  • Financial market variables (interest rates)
  • Macroeconomic Target
  • Inflation target
  • Economic growth target
  • Unemployment rate target
  • Exchange rates target

47
Use of Macroeconomic Targets
  • From a practical standpoint there are any number
    of macroeconomic variable a central bank might
    target. These include
  • A unemployment rate
  • A real GDP growth rate
  • An exchange rate
  • An inflation target
  • The use of exchange rate targets was popular
    among some central banks in the late 1980s/early
    1990s.
  • Bank of England adopted an exchange rate target
    in 1990.
  • However, beginning with the Central Bank of New
    Zealand in March 1990, central banks have been
    adopting either explicit or implicit inflation
    rates for their macroeconomic target.
  • Over the decade of the 1990s, a growing number of
    countries adopted explicit inflation targets (see
    next slide).

48
Explicit Targets 1990 and 1998
49
Adoption of Inflation Targets and Actual ( CPI
Data as of Feb 2008 , Oct 2008)
  • Examples of central banks which have adopted
    explicit inflation targets
  • New Zealand March 1990 (set at 0 to 2) (CPI
    3.2, 5.1)
  • Canada February 1991 (set at 1 to 3) (CPI
    2.2, 1.7)
  • United Kingdom October 1992 (set at 2) (CPI
    2.2, 5.2)
  • Australia 1993 (set a 2 to 3) (CPI 3.0, 5.0)
  • Euro-zone Jan 1999 (set below, but close to, 2)
    (CPI 3.2, 3.6)
  • Brazil June 1999 (set at 8) (4.56, 6.41)
  • South Africa 2002 (set a 3 to 6) (CPIX 9.3,
    13.0)
  • Other central banks which have implicit inflation
    targets
  • Japan The Bank of Japan's mission is to pursue
    price stability, in other words to maintain an
    economic environment in which there is neither
    inflation nor deflation.
  • United States shall maintain long run growth of
    the monetary and credit aggregates so as to
    promote stable prices

50
Inflation Targeting Statements
  • The primary objective of the ECBs monetary
    policy is to maintain price stability. The ECB
    aims at inflation rates of below, but close to,
    2 over the medium term.
  • The Bank of Englands monetary policy objective
    is to deliver price stabilitydefined by the
    Governments inflation target of 2.
  • Bank of Korea has adopted inflation targeting
    and its current inflation target has been set for
    the period 2004-2006 as a range of 2.5-3.5.
  • The Central Bank of Iceland's main objective is
    price stability, defined as a 12-month rise in
    the CPI (Consumer Price Index) of 2½.
  • The Bank of Switzerlands monetary policy aims
    at ensuring price stability in the medium and
    long term price stability is defined as a rise
    in the national consumer price index (CPI) of
    less than 2 per annum.

51
Inflation Targeting in New Zealand
  • Note GST refers to Goods and Services Tax
  • New Zealand had informally targeted inflation
    at 0 to 2 beginning in 1988 although in 1990 it
    was formally introduced into law with the New
    Zealand Act of 1989.

52
Inflation Targeting Impact on Interest Rates The
New Zealand Example
53
Should Central Banks be Independent?
  • While the major countries of the world have
    granted their central banks independence, many
    countries have not (especially developing
    countries).
  • Over the years, there has been growing debate as
    to the most efficient and effective arrangement.
  • Case for Central Bank Independence
  • Independent Central Banks are more likely to have
    longer run objectives while politicians may have
    shorter term objectives.
  • Independence avoids a political business cycle.
  • Empirical work suggests that countries with the
    most independent central banks do the best job of
    controlling inflation and achieving economic
    growth (see next slides).
  • Case against Central Bank Independence
  • Central Bank may not be accountable
  • Hinders coordination of monetary and fiscal
    policy

54
Central Bank Independence and Inflation, 1955-1988
55
Central Bank Independence and Inflation, 1973-1988
56
Central Bank Independence and Economic Growth,
1973-1988
57
But How Independent are Central Banks and what is
the Role of Governments?
58
Central Bank Transparency
  • Transparency means that a central bank provides
    the general public and the markets with all
    relevant information in an open, clear and timely
    manner.
  • Transparency reduces uncertainty about a central
    banks intention.
  • Today, most central banks consider transparency
    as crucial to their success.
  • Monetary policy is assumed to be more effective
    when the central bank provides the public with
    guidance on its objectives, activities and
    outlook.

59
Central Bank Transparency
  • Many Central Bank web sites now in English.
  • Many central bankers regularly talk to the
    public.
  • Central Bank decisions and actions are published
    in a timely and open manner.
  • Bank of England Monetary Policy Committee meets
    the first Thursday of every month. The decisions
    on interest rates are announced at 12 noon
    immediately following the meeting.
  • http//www.bankofengland.co.uk/monetarypolicy/deci
    sions/decisions07.htm
  • Governing Council of the ECB meets on the first
    Thursday of each month with the decision on the
    key ECB interest rates is issued at 1.45 p.m.
    C.E.T. At 2.30 p.m. C.E.T. , the President and
    the Vice-President of the ECB hold a press
    conference to discuss the decision.
  • http//www.ecb.int/press/govcdec/mopo/2007/html/in
    dex.en.html
  • Bank of Japan announce their interest rate
    decisions immediately following their meeting.
  • http//www.boj.or.jp/en/theme/seisaku/kettei/index
    .htm

60
Measures of Central Bank Transparency
61
Links to Worlds Major Central Banks
  • United States Ben Bernanke
  • http//www.federalreserve.gov/
  • European Union Jean-Claude Trichet
  • http//www.ecb.int/
  • Bank of England Mervyn King
  • http//www.bankofengland.co.uk/
  • Bank of Japan Toshihiko Fukui
  • http//www.boj.or.jp/en/index.htm

62
Other Useful Web Sites
  • Links to all the worlds Central Banks
  • http//www.bis.org/cbanks.htm
  • Federal Reserve statistical data
  • http//www.federalreserve.gov/releases/
  • Economic time series, U.S. and some foreign (also
    allowing for graphing of data)
  • http//www.economagic.com/

63
Appendix 1 Structure of the Federal Reserve
64
Formal Structure of the Federal Reserve System
  • The system (i.e., formal structure) as it exists
    now includes
  • Twelve Federal Reserve Banks
  • Member Banks, i.e., members of the Federal
    Reserve (around 3,600, out of about 7,500 banks)
  • Seven individuals who are members of the Board of
    Governors (BOG) of the Federal Reserve System
    (including a Chairman).
  • Twelve individual members of the Federal Open
    Market Committee (FOMC).
  • Federal Advisory Council (12 bankers)
  • Note The system, however, is dominated by the
    Board of Governors

65
Formal Structure of the Fed
66
The Twelve Federal Reserve Districts
67
Appendix 2 Other Major Central Banks
  • The Bank of England, the Bank of Japan and the
    European Central Bank are discussed in the slides
    that follow

68
Bank of England
  • Founded in 1694 initially to manage the U.K.
    Governments accounts and to borrow on behalf of
    the Government (usually to finance wars with
    France).
  • Controlled by the Government until granted
    interest rate autonomy in 1997 by the Labor
    Party.
  • Since May 1997 the Banks 9 member Monetary
    Policy Committee has had statutory responsibility
    for setting interest rates to meet the
    Government's stated inflation target.
  • Each year the Chancellor of the Exchequer sets an
    inflation target for the country (currently 2).
  • The MPC has to judge what interest rate is
    necessary to meet that inflation target.
  • The Bank implements its interest rate decisions
    by setting the interest rate at which the Bank
    lends to commercial banks and other financial
    institutions in the U.K.

69
Bank of Japan (Nippon Ginko)
  • Founded in 1882.
  • The Bank of Japan Law (1998) gave the Bank of
    Japan autonomy for monetary policy.
  • Also stated that monetary control shall pursuit
    price stability.
  • The 7 member Policy Board targets an overnight
    interest rate for uncollateralized call money
    (similar to U.S. federal funds).
  • The Bank controls the call money rate on a daily
    basis through money market operations (similar to
    open market operations).
  • Also uses an official discount rate at which it
    will make loans to banks.
  • At the present time, the Bank of Japan does not
    have a specified inflation target.

70
European Central Bank (ECB)
  • Founded in January 1999 by a treaty between the
    European Central Bank (ECB) and the European
    System of Central Banks (ESCB).
  • Stated goal is to maintain price stability in the
    euro area (at inflation rates of below, but close
    to, 2 over the medium term).
  • The 18 member Governing Council is the main
    decision making body of the ECB.
  • Consist of 6 Executive Board Members (chosen by
    the 12 euro member governments) plus the 12
    governors of all the national central banks from
    the 12 euro area countries
  • The Governing Council meets its inflation target
    by setting the interest rate at which banks
    borrow from the central bank (similar to U.S.
    federal funds rate).
  • The key ECB rate is the interest rate on
    refinancing operations which provide the bulk
    of liquidity to the banking system.

71
Appendix 3 Previous FOMC Press Releases
72
FOMC Statement January 31, 2007
  • The Federal Open Market Committee decided today
    to keep its target for the federal funds rate at
    5-1/4 percent.
  • Recent indicators have suggested somewhat firmer
    economic growth, and some tentative signs of
    stabilization have appeared in the housing
    market. Overall, the economy seems likely to
    expand at a moderate pace over coming quarters.
  • Readings on core inflation have improved modestly
    in recent months, and inflation pressures seem
    likely to moderate over time. However, the high
    level of resource utilization has the potential
    to sustain inflation pressures.
  • The Committee judges that some inflation risks
    remain. The extent and timing of any additional
    firming that may be needed to address these risks
    will depend on the evolution of the outlook for
    both inflation and economic growth, as implied by
    incoming information.
  • Voting for the FOMC monetary policy action were
    Ben S. Bernanke, Chairman Timothy F. Geithner,
    Vice Chairman Susan S. Bies Thomas M. Hoenig
    Donald L. Kohn Randall S. Kroszner Cathy E.
    Minehan Frederic S. Mishkin Michael H. Moskow
    William Poole and Kevin M. Warsh.

73
Summary of September 18, 2007 Meeting
  • The Federal Open Market Committee decided today
    to lower its target for the federal funds rate 50
    basis points to 4-3/4 percent.
  • Economic growth was moderate during the first
    half of the year, but the tightening of credit
    conditions has the potential to intensify the
    housing correction and to restrain economic
    growth more generally.  Todays action is
    intended to help forestall some of the adverse
    effects on the broader economy that might
    otherwise arise from the disruptions in financial
    markets and to promote moderate growth over
    time. 
  • Readings on core inflation have improved modestly
    this year.  However, the Committee judges that
    some inflation risks remain, and it will continue
    to monitor inflation developments carefully. 
  • Developments in financial markets since the
    Committees last regular meeting have increased
    the uncertainty surrounding the economic
    outlook.  The Committee will continue to assess
    the effects of these and other developments on
    economic prospects and will act as needed to
    foster price stability and sustainable economic
    growth.
  • In a related action, the Board of Governors
    unanimously approved a 50-basis-point decrease in
    the discount rate to 5-1/4 percent. 
  • Voting for the FOMC monetary policy action were
    Ben S. Bernanke, Chairman Timothy F. Geithner,
    Vice Chairman Charles L. Evans Thomas M.
    Hoenig Donald L. Kohn Randall S. Kroszner
    Frederic S. Mishkin William Poole Eric
    Rosengren and Kevin M. Warsh.  

74
Appendix 4 Previous Interest Rate Targets
75
Central Bank Operational Target Interest Rates,
October 22, 2007
  • Federal Reserve
  • Federal Funds Rate 4.75
  • Bank of England
  • Official bank rate 5.75
  • European Central Bank
  • Main refinancing rate 4.00
  • Bank of Japan
  • Uncollateralized overnight call rate 0.5
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com