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School of Economics and Finance

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This is a revamp of an earlier discussion group by the school, On steroids' ... do we know that we are not just benefiting from a charmed set of circumstances? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: School of Economics and Finance


1
Policy Discussion Meetings
Paul Frijters and Joseph Jeisman
  • Introduction to series by Paul Frijters (5
    minutes)
  • Inflation targeting via interest rates, by Joseph
    Jeisman (15 minutes)
  • This policy makes no sense by PF (10 min)
  • It does by special guest Uwe Dulleck (10 Minutes)
  • Group Discussion

2
Introduction to series
House notices
  • Once every 2 weeks on a Thursday.
  • Attendance roll for honours students.
  • Interruptions and arguments from students warmly
    invited. Non-presenting staff are asked to keep
    quiet until the last 20 minutes.
  • Were developing a website and a blog where
    students can download basic slides and argue for
    specific topics.TBA.

3
Background
  • This is a revamp of an earlier discussion group
    by the school, On steroids.
  • Part of a QUT wide drive towards research
    excellence. These meetings represent a major
    commitment from the school, are part of the new
    econometrics centre, and if things work out,
    youll get a better research training at this
    school than anywhere in Oz.
  • Preliminary Team Paul Frijters and Joseph
    Jeisman (main organisers), Stan Hurn, Michael
    Drew, Adrian Pagan.
  • Comes from the recognition that research at
    postgrad level in Economics and Finance is a big
    step up from an undergraduate degree and requires
    major time investments.
  • These meetings are an attempt to instil an
    academic attitude and acquaint those interested
    with a sense of the breadth and depth of policy
    relevant issues in economics and finance as well
    as a glimpse of the research frontier.

4
Timing
At the end of 2006 Functioning reading groups
and workshops
5
Does Inflation Targeting Really Work?
  • (and if so, how does it work?)

by Joseph Jeisman
6
Short History Lesson
  • Numerical inflation target first articulated to
    public in 1993
  • Formalised in 1996
  • Current policy Aim for inflation to be between
    2-3 over medium term short term deviations
    from this band dont necessarily represent
    failure.

7
Some inside knowledge
  • Central banks in most OECD countries now almost
    exclusively use only interest rate as a
    responsive monetary policy.
  • The rule is basically if inflation looks like
    heading above 3 percent, increase interest rates.
    If it heads below 2 percent, decrease them.
  • Policy discussion in the RBA involves crawling
    over data (lead indicators of inflation) and
    using low-brow argumentation. The deciding board
    has 9 members. 1 Economist and the rest
    non-experts. Salient notes one of our team
    members has been that economist econometrics
    deemed necessary for jobs at the RBA.

8
Markets follow the Central Bank
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10
The Verdict
  • Ostensibly, everything appears to have gone
    pretty well since 1993.
  • Inflation is low and relatively stable, upward
    pressure is combated by small rises in cash rate,
    which lower real GDP growth for a while, but
    relieves the inflationary pressure.
  • So what is the problem?

11
Possible arguments for the prosecution (Paul)
  • What drives monetary policy is still a very
    contentious issue. Some of the conventional
    explanations we are taught eg interest rate
    channel (in which an increase in the cash rate
    leads to reduced investment and consumption on
    consumer durables) hasnt received a whole heap
    of empirical support. If we dont know what is
    driving the success of inflation targeting how do
    we know that we are not just benefiting from a
    charmed set of circumstances? At the very least,
    we need to know how it works in order to know how
    to respond to a significant shock.
  • Perhaps inflation targeting is only good for
    promoting solid (but not great) growth (see
    table)
  • Is any inflation really a good thing? Should we
    be aiming for zero inflation?
  • With small open economies and all goods traded,
    interest rate policy should be entirely
    ineffective central bank rates are then cheap
    talk.

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14
Possible arguments for the defence (Uwe)
  • If it aint broke dont fix it. Seems to be
    working very well even if we dont fully
    understand it.
  • A myriad of explanations of the transmission of
    monetary policy have been developed, many which
    complement each other and may explain some of the
    seeming deficiencies of the traditional
    explanations. For example, transmission may occur
    via exchange rate markets or markets for credit.
  • Even if inflation targeting does promote solid
    growth rather than spectacular growth if it
    smooths out the downs as well as ups then that is
    probably a good thing.
  • There are also arguments advocating the
    usefulness of small positive inflation.
  • Interest rate policy should work for things that
    are either non-tradeable over countries or only
    so at high costs. Property is a prime example.

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