Introductory remarks

Similar documents
Monetary credibility problems. 1. In ation and discretionary monetary policy. 2. Reputational solution to credibility problems

1. Monetary credibility problems. 2. In ation and discretionary monetary policy. 3. Reputational solution to credibility problems

Monetary Economics: Macro Aspects, 19/ Henrik Jensen Department of Economics University of Copenhagen

1. Operating procedures and choice of monetary policy instrument. 2. Intermediate targets in policymaking. Literature: Walsh (Chapter 9, pp.

1. Money in the utility function (start)

EC3115 Monetary Economics

1 The empirical relationship and its demise (?)

1. Cash-in-Advance models a. Basic model under certainty b. Extended model in stochastic case. recommended)

Price stability, inflation targeting and public debt policy. Abstract

Monetary Policy: Rules versus discretion..

Lecture 2, November 16: A Classical Model (Galí, Chapter 2)

Interest Rates and Currency Prices in a Two-Country World. Robert E. Lucas, Jr. 1982

Reputation and Optimal Contract for Central Bankers

1. Operating procedures and choice of monetary policy instrument. 2. Intermediate targets in policymaking. Literature: Walsh (Chapter 11, pp.

Working Paper Series. This paper can be downloaded without charge from:

Chapter 21 - Exchange Rate Regimes

1. Money in the utility function (continued)

Optimal Monetary Policy

Charles Engel University of Wisconsin

Notes From Macroeconomics; Gregory Mankiw. Part 4 - BUSINESS CYCLES: THE ECONOMY IN THE SHORT RUN

Distortionary Fiscal Policy and Monetary Policy Goals

Monetary Policy, In ation, and the Business Cycle. Chapter 5. Monetary Policy Tradeo s: Discretion vs Commitment Jordi Galí y CREI and UPF August 2007

Exchange Rate Crises and Fiscal Solvency

Bailouts, Time Inconsistency and Optimal Regulation

Monetary Policy and Lexicographic Preference Ordering

Public budget accounting and seigniorage. 1. Public budget accounting, inflation and debt. 2. Equilibrium seigniorage

OPTIMAL MONETARY POLICY WITH OUTPUT AND ASSET PRICE VOLATILITY IN AN OPEN ECONOMY: EVIDENCE FROM KENYA

0. Finish the Auberbach/Obsfeld model (last lecture s slides, 13 March, pp. 13 )

Conditional versus Unconditional Utility as Welfare Criterion: Two Examples

Week 8: Fiscal policy in the New Keynesian Model

Chapter 13. Introduction. Goods Market Equilibrium. Modeling Strategy. Nominal Exchange Rate: A Convention. The Nominal Exchange Rate

Aggregate demand. Short run aggregate demand (AD) function: Monetary rule followed by the government: Short run aggregate supply (AS) function:

Chapter 1: Introduction to Macroeconomics

Transparency and Credibility: Monetary Policy with Unobservable Goals

Choice of Monetary Policy Instrument under Targeting Regimes in a Simple Stochastic Macro Model. Mr. Haider Ali Dr. Eatzaz Ahmad

Real Wage Rigidities and Disin ation Dynamics: Calvo vs. Rotemberg Pricing

EC2032 Macroeconomics & Finance

What we know about monetary policy

International Money and Banking: 15. The Phillips Curve: Evidence and Implications

Behavioral Finance and Asset Pricing

The Role of Physical Capital

1 Multiple Choice (30 points)

Inflation Targeting and Optimal Monetary Policy. Michael Woodford Princeton University

SOLUTIONS PROBLEM SET 5

WORKING PAPER. Department of Economics Tufts University Medford, MA (617)

1 Optimal Taxation of Labor Income

Central bank credibility and the persistence of in ation and in ation expectations

Optimal Capital Taxation and Consumer Uncertainty

José De Gregorio: Autonomy of the Central Bank of Chile, 20 years on

Presented as part of the requirements for the Award of a Research Masters Degree in Economics from NOVA School of Business and Economics

CONSERVATIVE CENTRAL BANKS: HOW CONSERVATIVE SHOULD A CENTRAL BANK BE?

AGGREGATE DEMAND, AGGREGATE SUPPLY, AND INFLATION. Chapter 25

Suggested answers to Problem Set 5

Cash in Advance Models

1 Chapter 1: Economic growth

Welfare analysis of currency regimes with defautable debt

The Effects of Dollarization on Macroeconomic Stability

Chapters 1 & 2 - MACROECONOMICS, THE DATA

Inflation Targeting and Debt Crises in the Open Economy: A Note. September Olivier Jeanne Johns Hopkins University, Department of Economics

Barro-Gordon Revisited: Reputational Equilibria with Inferential Expectations

EconS Advanced Microeconomics II Handout on Social Choice

The Dual Nature of Public Goods and Congestion: The Role. of Fiscal Policy Revisited

Endogenous risk in a DSGE model with capital-constrained financial intermediaries

Sovereign Debt Management, Fiscal Vulnerabilities and Monetary Policy Interaction Alessandro Missale University of Milan

Macroeconomic Policy during a Credit Crunch

Revision Lecture. MSc Finance: Theory of Finance I MSc Economics: Financial Economics I

Lucas s Investment Tax Credit Example

ANSWER: We can find consumption and saving by solving:

REPUTATION AND OPTIMAL CONTRACT FOR CENTRAL BANKERS

Part A: Answer Question A1 (required) and Question A2 or A3 (choice).

Chapter 24. The Role of Expectations in Monetary Policy

1 Two Period Production Economy

Actors of Monetary Environment. Monetary Policy. Inflation, the Phillips Curve, and Central Bank Commitment

International Monetary Policy Coordination and Financial Market Integration

Optimal Progressivity

Principles of Banking (III): Macroeconomics of Banking (1) Introduction

Part A: Answer Question A1 (required) and Question A2 or A3 (choice).

Lecture 9: Basic Oligopoly Models

General Examination in Macroeconomic Theory. Fall 2010

Supply-side effects of monetary policy and the central bank s objective function. Eurilton Araújo

Exchange Rate Regimes

Notes From Macroeconomics; Gregory Mankiw. Part 5 - MACROECONOMIC POLICY DEBATES. Ch14 - Stabilization Policy?

Problems in Rural Credit Markets

Black Markets and Pre-Reform Crises in Former Socialist Economies

Monetary Economics Lecture 5 Theory and Practice of Monetary Policy in Normal Times

IMPERFECT COMPETITION AND TRADE POLICY

Fragility of Incomplete Monetary Unions

B r i e f T a b l e o f C o n t e n t s

The Limits of Monetary Policy Under Imperfect Knowledge

Macroeconomic Cycle and Economic Policy

TOBB-ETU, Economics Department Macroeconomics II (ECON 532) Practice Problems III

Measuring the Wealth of Nations: Income, Welfare and Sustainability in Representative-Agent Economies

14.02 Principles of Macroeconomics Fall 2009

Central bank independence and macroeconomic performance: a survey of the evidence. Friedrich Kißmer and Helmut Wagner. Diskussionsbeitrag Nr.

1 A Simple Model of the Term Structure

Expectations Driven Fluctuations and Stabilization Policy

General Examination in Macroeconomic Theory SPRING 2014

Money in OLG Models. Econ602, Spring The central question of monetary economics: Why and when is money valued in equilibrium?

Chapter 9, section 3 from the 3rd edition: Policy Coordination

Monetary-Fiscal Policy Interactions and Commitment Versus Discretion in a Monetary Union Λ Avinash Dixit a, Luisa Lambertini b;y a Princeton Universit

Transcription:

Introductory remarks The Barro and Gordon model provides a framework for analyzing time-inconsistency problems in monetary policy Demonstrates that credibility problems have economic costs In the particular model, an in ation bias In other elds: Speculative attacks on non-credible exchange rate pegs Hyperin ations if governments cannot credibly refrain from in ationary nance Disin ations typically have signi cant output costs Suboptimal savings and investments, if governments cannot credible refrain from impose surprise taxes on wealth A market mechanism based on reputation building and evolution of social norms, can be one way of attaining credibility If not viable, other mechanisms may be necessary => Normative theories of how to overcome time-inconsistency problems by altering the central bank s incentives c 2011 Henrik Jensen. This document may be reproduced for educational and research purposes, as long as the copies contain this notice and are retained for personal use or distributed free.

Delegation and independent central banks The incentive to surprise in ation is often interpreted as arising from political pressures Solution to time-inconsistency problem could be achieved by Delegating monetary policy conduct to independent central banks => Create monetary institutions securing independence and appropriate policy incentives I.e., appropriate design of policy regime in broadest sense Several solutions proposed in the literature Analyses here are cast in versions of Barro Gordon model with Variant II utility, I.e., U = 2 (y y n k) 2 1 2 2 and with usual AS schedule: y = y n + a ( e ) + e; E [e] = 0 In ation is the policy instrument. Remember, the socially optimal, ex ante, policy: = b 0 b 1 e = a 1 + a 2e 2

Under delegation, a new stage in the move structure; the institutional design stage : 1: Establishment of monetary delegation regime 2: e is formed 3: e is realized 4: is set 5: y is determined Delegation to a conservative central banker The idea is to appoint a central banker, who puts relative more weight on in ation stabilization than society I.e., monetary policy is delegated to central banker with utility U c = 2 (y y n k) 2 1 + 2 2 ; > 0 This is Rogo s conservative central banker; measures the degree of conservativeness (Rogo, 1985, QJE) Monetary policymaking by the central banker (taking as given e and e) is characterized by the rst-order condition a (a ( e ) + e k) = (1 + ) (*) Note that > 0 increases the marginal cost of in ation Rational in ation expectations follow by taking expectations on both sides of (*): ak = (1 + ) E [] =) E [] = ak 1 + < ak 3

With a conservative central banker, the in ation bias is reduced from ak to ak= (1 + ) the private sector foresees the central banker s reduced incentive to increase in ation to achieve output gains Conservativeness, however, has a cost. The solution for actual in ation becomes (plug the solution for e =E[] back into (*)) = ak 1 + Stabilization of the shock is distorted a 1 + + a2e (7.18 ) Compared to the socially optimal response to a supply shock, a conservative central bank responds less to the shock Result is too stable in ation and too unstable output Appointing a conservative central bank thus involves a trade-o between a) Lower average in ation b) Poorer macroeconomic stabilization So, will it ever be optimal to have > 0? Yes, always: At = 0, a marginal increase in involves a rst-order social gain of lower average in ation (at = 0 average in ation is suboptimal) At = 0, a marginal increase in involves a second-order social loss of poorer stabilization (at = 0 stabilization is optimal) 4

The conservative central banker appointing a governor with particular preferences thus partially solves the time-inconsistency problem of monetary policymaking The cost of poorer stabilization, however, begs the question of whether other preferences, or incentive structures, may solve the problem completely This is the question asked in the incentive contracts approach to delegation Incentive contracts Under this approach, the government appoints a central bank, and o ers him/her a performance contract This contract rewards or punishes the central bank depending on its performance The contract could be pecuniary but more generally, it could represent public embarrassment if the central bank doesn t ful ll its contract Real world analogy: The Federal Reserve Act of 1989 in New Zealand: The governor can be red, if he performs poorly... 5

Formally, the central bank is o ered a contract, such that it maximizes U + t where t is the contract transfer Assume that the contract transfer cannot be made contingent on the supply shock, so only a transfer depending on observed in ation is considered: t = t () Task of government is to choose the optimal t () (at institutional design stage) Central bank takes expectations and the supply shock as given, and maximizes 2 (a ( e ) + e k) 2 1 2 2 + t () The rst-order condition is a (a ( e ) + e k) = t 0 () (**) If t 0 () < 0 we see that the marginal cost of in ation is higher than without the transfer; i.e., the contract punishes in ation increases Rational in ation expectations follow by taking expectations on both sides of (**): ak = E [] E [t 0 ()] =) E [] = ak + E [t 0 ()] 6

Insert these expectations back into (**) to get actual in ation a (a ( ak E [t 0 ()]) + e k) = t 0 () = ak + a2 1 + a 2E [t0 ()] + t0 () a 1 + a 2 1 + a 2e Optimal policy is implemented if the transfer function satis es ak + a2 1 + a 2E [t0 ()] + t0 () 1 + a = 0 2 This is accomplished if t 0 () = ak A transfer function with this property: t () = t 0 ak A linear in ation contract Linear because the incentive to surprise the private sector is a constant in equilibrium; hence, a constant marginal punishment eliminates the in ation bias (also for non-quadratic utility) In contrast to a conservative central banker, the linear in ation contract portrays the optimal incentive structure, implementing optimal average in ation and optimal shock stabilization 7

Under the optimal contract, the central bank retains exibility to respond optimally towards shocks Often monetary institutions, however, are set up to limit this exibility in order to reduce, e.g., the central bank s vulnerability towards political pressures This is often modelled as targeting rules prescribing goals that the central bank should achieve through policy I.e., the central bank is judged on its ability to attain these goals (note analogy with contract approach...) Examples are exchange rate targeting, in ation targeting, money supply targeting,... 8