LOS 15.a: Describe the roles and objectives of central banks.
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There are several key roles of central banks. These roles are listed and explained below.
The primary objective of a central bank is to control inflation so as to promote price stability. High inflation is not conducive to a stable economic environment. High inflation leads to menu costs (the costs to businesses of frequently changing prices) and shoe-leather costs (the costs to individuals of making frequent trips to the bank to minimise cash holdings that are depreciating in value due to inflation).
In addition to price stability, some central banks have other stated goals:
The target inflation rate in most developed countries is typically in a range around 2% to 3%. A target of zero inflation is usually avoided because it increases the risk of deflation, which can be disruptive for an economy.
While most developed countries have an explicit target inflation rate, the U.S. Fed and the Bank of Japan do not currently have a simple single-point target in the same manner as many other central banks. In the United States this is because the Fed has the additional goals of maximum employment and moderate long-term interest rates. In Japan, deflation rather than inflation has been a persistent problem in recent years.
Some developed and several developing countries choose to target the exchange rate of their currency against another currency (often the U.S. dollar). This is referred to as pegging the exchange rate to the dollar. If their currency appreciates (becomes relatively more valuable), they can sell domestic currency reserves for dollars to reduce the exchange rate. While such actions may be effective in the short run, maintaining that peg over time requires the monetary authorities in the pegging country to manage interest rates and economic activity to achieve their goal. This can lead to increased volatility of their money supply and interest rates. The pegging country essentially commits to a policy intended to make its inflation rate equal to the inflation rate of the country to which it pegs its currency.
LOS 15.b: Describe tools used to implement monetary policy and the monetary transmission mechanism, and explain the relationships between monetary policy and economic growth, inflation, interest, and exchange rates.
Monetary policy is implemented using the policy instruments of the central bank. The three main policy tools of central banks are described below.
The monetary transmission mechanism refers to the ways in which a change in monetary policy-specifically the central bank's policy rate-affects the price level and inflation. A change in the policy rate that monetary authorities directly control is transmitted to prices through four primary channels: other short-term rates, asset values, currency exchange rates, and expectations.
We can examine the transmission mechanism in more detail by considering the effects of a change to a contractionary monetary policy implemented through an increase in the policy rate:
Taken together, these effects act to decrease aggregate demand and place downward pressure on the price level. A decrease in the policy rate would affect the price level through the same channels, but in the opposite direction.
If money neutrality holds, changes in monetary policy and the policy rate will have no effect on real output in the long run. In the short run, however, changes in monetary policy can affect real economic growth as well as interest rates, inflation, and foreign exchange rates. The effects of a change to a more expansionary monetary policy may include any or all of the following:
A central bank's policy goals least likely include:
A. price stability.
B. minimizing long-term interest rates.
C. maximizing the sustainable growth rate of the economy.
A country that targets a stable exchange rate with another country's currency least likely:
A. accepts the inflation rate of the other country.
B. will sell its currency if its foreign exchange value rises.
C. must also match the money supply growth rate of the other country.
If a country's inflation rate is below the central bank's target rate, the central bank is most likely to:
A. sell government securities.
B. increase the reserve requirement.
C. decrease the overnight lending rate.
A central bank conducts monetary policy primarily by altering the:
A. policy rate.
B. inflation rate.
C. long-term interest rate.
Purchases of securities in the open market by the monetary authorities are least likely to increase:
A. excess reserves.
B. cash in investor accounts.
C. the interbank lending rate.
An increase in the policy rate will most likely lead to an increase in: A. business investments in fixed assets.
B. consumer spending on durable goods.
C. the foreign exchange value of the domestic currency.
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LOS 15.c: Describe qualities of effective central banks; contrast their use of inflation, interest rate, and exchange rate targeting in expansionary or contractionary monetary policy; and describe the limitations of monetary policy.
For a central bank to succeed in its inflation-targeting policies, it should have three essential qualities:
Central banks have used various economic variables and indicators over the years to make monetary policy decisions. In the past, some have used interest rate targeting, increasing the money supply when specific interest rates rose above a target band and decreasing the money supply (or the rate of money supply growth) when interest rates fell below a target band. Currently, inflation targeting is the most widely used framework for making monetary policy decisions, and it is required by law in some countries. Central banks that currently use inflation targeting include the United Kingdom, Brazil, Canada, Australia, Mexico, and the ECB.
The most common inflation rate target is 2%, with a permitted deviation of ±1% so the target band is 1% to 3%. The reason the inflation target is not 0% is that variations around that rate would allow for negative inflation (deflation), which is considered disruptive to the smooth functioning of an economy. Central banks are not necessarily targeting current inflation, which is the result of prior policy and events, but typically target inflation in a horizon of about two years in the future.
Some countries, especially developing countries, use exchange rate targeting. That is, they target a foreign exchange rate between their currency and another (often the U.S. dollar), rather than targeting inflation. As an example, consider a country that has targeted an exchange rate for its currency versus the U.S. dollar. If the foreign exchange value of the domestic currency falls relative to the U.S. dollar, the monetary authority must use foreign reserves to purchase their domestic currency (which reduces money supply growth and raises interest rates) to reach the target exchange rate. Conversely, an increase in the foreign exchange value of the domestic currency above the target rate will require sale of the domestic currency in currency markets to reduce its value (increasing the domestic money supply and decreasing interest rates) to move toward the target exchange rate. One result of exchange rate targeting may be greater volatility of the money supply because domestic monetary policy must adapt to the necessity of maintaining a stable foreign exchange rate.
Over the short term, the targeting country can purchase or sell its currency in foreign exchange markets to influence the exchange rate. There are limits, however, on how much influence currency purchases or sales can have on exchange rates over time. For example, a country may run out of foreign reserves with which to purchase its currency when the exchange value of its currency is still below the target exchange rate.
The net effect of exchange rate targeting is that the targeting country will tend to have the same inflation rate as the country with the targeted currency, and the targeting country will need to follow monetary policy and accept interest rates that are consistent with this goal regardless of domestic economic circumstances.
The transmission mechanism for monetary policy does not always produce the intended results. In particular, long-term rates may not rise and fall with short-term rates because of the effect of monetary policy changes on expected inflation.
If individuals and businesses believe that a decrease in the money supply intended to reduce inflation will be successful, they will expect lower future inflation rates. Because long-term bond yields include a premium for expected inflation, long-term rates could fall (tending to increase economic growth), even while the central bank has increased short-term rates to slow economic activity. Conversely, increasing the money supply to stimulate economic activity could lead to an increase in expected inflation rates and long-term bond yields, even as short-term rates fall.
From a different perspective, monetary tightening may be viewed as too extreme-raising the probability of a recession, making long-term bonds more attractive, and reducing long-term interest rates. If money supply growth is seen as inflationary, higher expected future asset prices will make long-term bonds relatively less attractive and will increase long-term interest rates. Bond market participants that act in this way have been called bond market vigilantes. When the central bank's policy is credible and investors believe that the inflation target rate will be maintained over time, this effect on long-term rates will be small.
Another situation in which the transmission mechanism may not perform as expected is if demand for money becomes very elastic and individuals willingly hold more money even without a decrease in short-term rates. Such a situation is called a liquidity trap. Increasing the growth of the money supply will not decrease short-term rates under these conditions because individuals hold the money in cash balances instead of investing in interest-bearing securities. If an economy is experiencing deflation even though monetary policy has been expansionary, liquidity trap conditions may be present.
Compared to inflation, deflation is more difficult for central banks to reverse. In a deflationary environment, monetary policy needs to be expansionary. However, the central bank is limited to reducing the nominal policy rate to zero. Once it reaches zero, the central bank has a limited ability to further stimulate the economy through conventional policy rate reductions.
Another reason standard tools for increasing the money supply might not increase economic activity is that even with increasing excess reserves, banks may not be willing to lend. When what has become known as the credit bubble collapsed in 2008, banks around the world lost equity capital and desired to rebuild it. For this reason, they decreased their lending even as money supplies were increased and short-term rates fell. With short-term rates near zero, economic growth still poor, and a threat of deflation, central banks began a policy termed quantitative easing (QE).
In the United Kingdom, quantitative easing entailed large purchases of British government bonds in the maturity range of three to five years. The intent was to reduce interest rates to encourage borrowing and to generate excess reserves in the banking system to encourage lending. Uncertainty about the economy's future caused banks to behave conservatively and to hold more excess reserves rather than make loans.
In the United States, billions of dollars were made available for the Fed to buy assets other than short-term Treasury securities. Large amounts of mortgage securities were purchased from banks to encourage bank lending and reduce mortgage rates in an attempt to revive the housing market, which had collapsed. When this program did not have the desired effect, a second round of quantitative easing (QE2) was initiated. The Fed purchased long-term Treasury bonds in large quantities (hundreds of billions of dollars) with the goal of bringing down longer-term interest rates and generating excess reserves to increase lending and economic growth. The Fed has also purchased securities with credit risk as part of its quantitative easing, improving banks' balance sheets but perhaps shifting risk from the private sector to the public sector.
Developing countries face problems in successfully implementing monetary policy. Without a liquid market in their government debt, interest rate information may be distorted and open market operations difficult to implement. In a very rapidly developing economy, it may be quite difficult to determine the neutral rate of interest for policy purposes. Rapid financial innovation may change the demand to hold monetary aggregates. Central banks may lack credibility because of past failure(s) to maintain inflation rates in a target band and might not be given independence by the political authority.
Monetary policy and fiscal policy may each be either expansionary or contractionary, so there are four possible scenarios:
Not surprisingly, the fiscal multipliers for different types of fiscal stimulus differ, and the effects of expansionary fiscal policy are greater when it is combined with expansionary monetary policy. The fiscal multiplier for direct government spending increases has been much higher than the fiscal multiplier for increases in transfers to individuals or for tax reductions for workers. Transfer payments to the poor have the greatest relative impact, followed by tax cuts for workers, and broader-based transfers to individuals (not targeted). For all types of fiscal stimulus, the impact is greater when the fiscal actions are combined with expansionary monetary policy. This may reflect the impact of greater inflation, falling real interest rates, and the resulting increase in business investments.
Qualities of effective central banks include:
A. credibility and verifiability.
B. comparability and relevance.
C. independence and transparency.
Monetary policy is likely to be least responsive to domestic economic conditions if policymakers employ:
A. inflation targeting.
B. interest rate targeting.
C. exchange rate targeting.
Monetary policy is most likely to fail to achieve its objectives when the economy is: A. growing rapidly.
B. experiencing deflation.
C. experiencing disinflation.
Central bank roles include supplying currency, acting as a banker to the government and to other banks, regulating and supervising the payments system, acting as a lender of last resort, holding the nation's gold and foreign currency reserves, and conducting monetary policy.
Central banks have the objective of controlling inflation, and some have additional goals of maintaining currency stability, full employment, positive sustainable economic growth, or moderate interest rates.
Policy tools available to central banks include the policy rate, reserve requirements, and open market operations. The policy rate is called the discount rate in the United States, the refinancing rate by the ECB, and the two-week repo rate in the United Kingdom.
Decreasing the policy rate, decreasing reserve requirements, and making open market purchases of securities are all expansionary. Increasing the policy rate, increasing reserve requirements, and making open market sales of securities are all contractionary.
The transmission mechanism for changes in the central bank's policy rate through to prices and inflation includes one or more of the following:
A contractionary monetary policy (increase in policy rate) will tend to decrease economic growth, increase market interest rates, decrease inflation, and lead to appreciation of the domestic currency in foreign exchange markets. An expansionary monetary policy (decrease in policy rate) will have opposite effects, tending to increase economic growth, decrease market interest rates, increase inflation, and reduce the value of the currency in foreign exchange markets.
Effective central banks exhibit independence, credibility, and transparency.
Independence. The central bank is relatively free from political interference.
Credibility. The central bank follows through on its stated policy intentions.
Transparency. The central bank makes clear what economic indicators it uses and reports on the state of those indicators.
Most central banks set target inflation rates, typically 2%-3%, rather than targeting interest rates as was once common. When inflation is expected to rise above (fall below) the target band, the money supply is decreased (increased) to reduce (increase) economic activity.
Developing economies sometimes target a stable exchange rate for their currency relative to that of a developed economy, selling their currency when its value rises above the target rate and buying their currency with foreign reserves when the rate falls below the target. The developing country must follow a monetary policy that supports the target exchange rate and essentially commits to having the same inflation rate as the developed country.
Reasons that monetary policy may not work as intended:
Interaction of monetary and fiscal policies:
1. B Central bank goals often include the following: maximum employment, which is interpreted as the maximum sustainable growth rate of the economy; stable prices; and moderate (not minimum) long-term interest rates. ((<>)LOS 15.a)
2. C The money supply growth rate may need to be adjusted to keep the exchange rate within acceptable bounds, but it is not necessarily the same as that of the other country. The other two statements are true. ((<>)LOS 15.a)
3. C Decreasing the overnight lending rate would add reserves to the banking system, which would encourage bank lending, expand the money supply, reduce interest rates, and allow GDP growth and the rate of inflation to increase. Selling government securities or increasing the reserve requirement would have the opposite effect, reducing the money supply and decreasing the inflation rate. ((<>)LOS 15.b)
4. A The primary method by which a central bank conducts monetary policy is through changes in the target short-term rate or policy rate. ((<>)LOS 15.b)
5. C Open market purchases by monetary authorities decrease the interbank lending rate by increasing excess reserves that banks can lend to one another-and therefore, increasing their willingness to lend. ((<>)LOS 15.b)
6. C An increase in the policy rate is likely to increase longer-term interest rates, causing decreases in consumption spending on durable goods and business investments in plant and equipment. The increase in rates, however, makes investment in the domestic economy more attractive to foreign investors, increasing demand for the domestic currency and causing the currency to appreciate. ((<>)LOS 15.b)
1. C The three qualities of effective central banks are independence, credibility, and transparency. ((<>)LOS 15.c)
2. C Exchange rate targeting requires monetary policy to be consistent with the goal of a stable exchange rate with the targeted currency, regardless of domestic economic conditions. ((<>)LOS 15.c)
3. B Monetary policy has a limited ability to act effectively against deflation because the policy rate cannot be reduced below zero, and demand for money may be highly elastic (liquidity trap). ((<>)LOS 15.c)