Title: Inflation Targeting and Monetary Policy Rules: Experience and Research
1Inflation Targeting and Monetary Policy Rules
Experience and Research
- John B. Taylor
- Stanford University
- Presented at the 12th Meeting of the Latin
American Network of Central Banks and Finance
Ministries - Inter-American Development Bank
- May12, 2000
2Outline
- Conceptual Issues
- Recent experience in U.S. and other countries
- Describing the decisions as policy rules
- Research methodology
- Research results
- Key threshold for response to inflation
- Robustness
- Inflation forecast based rules and forecast
targeting - Exchange rates
- Gap uncertainty
- Asset price bubbles
- Zero interest bounds
- Conclusions
3Inflation targeting
- Choose an inflation target ?
- Explicit? Numerical? Implicit?
- Keep inflation rate close to the target
- In mathematical terms minimize, over a long
horizon, the loss function - w1(?t - ?)2 w2 (yt yt)2 w3 (et et)2
-
- Does not imply that w2 0, sometimes called
strict - Does imply that y natural rate of output
-
-
4But inflation targeting is not enough, need to
say something about the policy instruments
- Analogy
- Targeting the destination for a sailboat versus
saying how to sail the boat to the destination in
a short time - angle of attack, sail trim, contingency for wind
change, - Many alternatives to achieve an inflation target
- Fixed money growth
- Permanently fixed exchange rate
- Active crawling peg
- Interest rate rule
- Exchange rate rule
- Monetary conditions index rule
5Recent Experience U.S.
- 2000 will be 18th year of the Long Boom
- First and second longest peacetime expansions in
U.S. history - 1991- , 1982-1990
- Recession in between was short and mild
- Inflation has been low and stable
- No period of macroeconomic stability like this
before - 17 years before this (1966-82) had 5 recessions
- Before 1982 in recession 35 percent of the time
- Since 1982 in recession less than 4 percent of
the time
6percent
20
Real GDP growth rate (Quarterly)
15
10
5
0
-5
-10
60
65
70
75
80
85
90
95
7percent
4
2
0
-2
GDP gap with HP trend
for potential GDP
-4
-6
60
65
70
75
80
85
90
95
8Why the Increased Stability?
- Good luck?
- No big shocks like the 1970s?
- But shocks were big several times
- Late 1980s credit crunch
- 1998 currency crises,
- Now viewed as favorable supply shocks
- Change in the economic structure?
- Services, inventories, high-tech new economy
- Good policy?
- Fiscal policy?
- Deficit reduction and elimination?
- Keynesian counter-cyclical policy?
9U.S. monetary policy has changed
- More reactive to changes in inflation
- federal funds rate rises by twice as much when
inflation rises 75 versus 150 basis points - This more prompt, more reactive policy, has kept
inflation from rising, thereby preventing
recessions. - For example, compare the funds rate changes in
the late 1980s and the late 1960s
1012
Inflation rate
10
Smoothed inflation rate (4 quarter average)
8
6
1968.1 Funds rate was 4.8
1989.2 Funds rate was 9.7
4
2
0
60
65
70
75
80
85
90
11Many other Experiences Inflation/Output Stability
Before and After Inflation Targeting
(percent)Source Cecchetti and Ehrmann(1999)
Period ?inf ?growth
Before1985-89 15.0 7.5
After 1993-97 3.3 6.9
Difference 11.7 0.6
Australia Canada Chile Finland Israel New
Zealand Spain Sweden U.K.
12Describing Decisions for Policy Evaluation
Purposes
- Change overnight rate if
- (1) Inflation moves away from target
- (2) Real GDP moves away from trend (potential)
- Little mention of money growth or exchange rates
- Decisions are pretty well described by Taylor
rule - Interest rate inflation .5(inflation 2)
.5(GDP gap) 2
13Use of Policy Rules in Practice
- Of course, no policy rule can be followed
mechanically - Special factors
- Need to estimate potential GDP growth
- But can be used as a guideline in many cases
- Or, more complex actions are approximated by a
simple rule. - Example, inflation forecast targeting
- Useful for private sector too
14Example Interest Rate Analysis of U.K.by
PriceWaterhouseCoopers
- If growth was left unchecked it could lead to an
acceleration of inflation to over 4 in 2001.
Using a simple Taylor rule, we estimate that
interest rates would eventually need to be raised
to around 7.5 by early 2001 - In contrast, if the UK recovery stalls next year
then inflation is likely to fall further below
target. Our Taylor rule simulations suggest that
interest rates might then need to be cut to only
around 4 by early 2001
15Source www.dglux.lu/en/505.htm
16Sourcewww.dglux.lu/en/505.htm
17Source www.dglux.lu/en/505.htm
18Source www.dglux.lu/en/505.htm
19Methodology for Research on Monetary Policy Rules
- Stick a policy rule into a model
- Having models at the central bank is important
- eg Brazil, Canada, Sweden, U.S.
- Solve the model
- Look at the behavior of the variables (inflation,
real output, exchange rate) - Choose the rule that gives the most satisfactory
performance (optimal) - Check for robustness using other models
20Interest rate
Constant Real Interest Rate
Policy Rule
Inflation rate
Target
Important Threshold Result Slope Should be
Greater 1
21(No Transcript)
22Inflation Forecast Based Rules
- it g?(Et?tj) for some j where E is the
forecast - Model or judgemental
- Cant see future so based on current and lagged
info - A way to put weight on output Choosing a longer
horizon (j) is like putting more weight on
output. - For j 6 not as good as simple rules in ECB
simulations (Taylor, 1999) - Optimal choice of j appears to be very small, and
too large a j is not robust ( paper by Levin,
Weiland, Williams presented at ECB conf.) - For jgt2 there is great uncertainty
- Not as robust as rules with j 0 and output gap
23Inflation forecast targeting
- Set it so that Et?tj equals ? or approaches it
gradually over the time - Much less formal research on this procedure
- not a rule
- hard to simulate
- Woodfords Jackson Hole comment
- But in practice there is a role for forecasting
- Both inflation and real GDP growth
- Forecasting model at central bank needs to imbed
threshold result - Inflation Reports as in U.K. and Brazil are useful
24Exchange rate regimes
- Flexible exchange rates cum monetary policy rules
- Several models in research studies have the
exchange rate channel as part of the transmission
mechanism and perfect capital mobility - But rule without exchange rate is still pretty
robust - My suggestion for a rule for the U.S. was based
on a multicountry model with exchange rate
channel - But much more research is needed
- Exchange rate variations are more costly in small
open economy with foreign currency denominated
debt - Using exchange rate to affect inflation directly
25Put exchange rate in policy rule
One approach Place exchange rate into interest
rate rule it g??t gyyt ge0et ge1et-1
?it-1 where it is the nominal
interest rate, ?t is the inflation rate
(smoothed over four quarters), yt is the
deviation of real GDP from potential GDP, et is
the exchange rate (higher e is an appreciation).
26Simulation results with exchange rate
27Uncertainty in Measuring Potential GDP
- Uncertainty is very large
- Gap range is now 0 to 3 for U.S.
- Solutions
- Add research funds to get better estimates
- Reduce weight on gap (Frank Smets ECB study)
- Use growth rate rather than gap big debate here
-
28Interest rate hitting zero problem
- Downward spiral
- To estimate likelihood of hitting zero and
getting stuck, put simple policy rule in policy
model and see what happens - pretty safe for inflation targets of 1 to 2
percent - Modify simple rule
- Interest rate stays near zero after the expected
crises (Reifschneider and Williams (1999))
29Interest rate
Constant Real Interest Rate
Policy Rule
Inflation rate
0
Target
The Downward Spiral Problem
30Should central banks try to break stock price
bubbles?
- Add a stock price term to simple policy rule
- simulations show that reacting to this term
increases output and inflation variability - But some sharp changes in asset prices may
require discretionary increases in liquidity - 1987 stock market crash in U.S.
- 1998 reaction to change in risk premium...
31Conclusion
- Inflation targeting is not enough
- Implementing inflation targeting in practice
requires analysis of how the instruments of
policy should be changed - Interest rate policy rules are a way to implement
inflation targeting - Lots of research about the form of policy rules
- Research needed on how policy rules are to be
used - Guidelines? Part of IMF programs? Private sector
monitoring? - More research is needed on exchange rate issues
in highly open economies - Flexible exchange rates with a monetary policy
rules provide a lot of room between the corner
solutions