Monetary Policy and Exchange Rate Stabilization in Norway and Sweden

Similar documents
Do Central Banks respond to exchange rate movements? A Markov-Switching structural investigation

Do Central Banks Respond to Exchange Rate Movements? A Markov-Switching Structural Investigation

THE ROLE OF EXCHANGE RATES IN MONETARY POLICY RULE: THE CASE OF INFLATION TARGETING COUNTRIES

Monetary policy, leaning and concern for financial stability

Distortionary Fiscal Policy and Monetary Policy Goals

Discussion of Trend Inflation in Advanced Economies

Review of the literature on the comparison

The benefits and drawbacks of inflation targeting

Macroeconomic Modelling at the Central Bank of Brazil. Angelo M. Fasolo Research Department

Do Central Banks Respond to Exchange Rate Movements? A Structural Investigation

Global and National Macroeconometric Modelling: A Long-run Structural Approach Overview on Macroeconometric Modelling Yongcheol Shin Leeds University

Recent Changes in Macro Policy and its Effects: Some Time-Series Evidence

Monetary and Fiscal Policy

Down the rabbit-hole : Does monetary policy impact differ during the housing bubbles?

Oil and macroeconomic (in)stability

The International Transmission of Euro Area Monetary Policy Shocks. by Nils Jannsen and Melanie Klein

STOCK RETURNS AND INFLATION: THE IMPACT OF INFLATION TARGETING

Inflation Targeting and Output Stabilization in Australia

Unemployment Fluctuations and Nominal GDP Targeting

Evolving Macroeconomic dynamics in a small open economy: An estimated Markov Switching DSGE model for the UK

Are Intrinsic Inflation Persistence Models Structural in the Sense of Lucas (1976)?

The Impact of an Increase In The Money Supply and Government Spending In The UK Economy

Interest Rates and Monetary Policy

Modern DSGE models: Theory and evidence DISCUSSION OF H. UHLIG S AND M. EICHENBAUM S PRESENTATIONS

The Bank of England s forecasting platform

Demographics and Secular Stagnation Hypothesis in Europe

The Timing and Magnitude of Exchange Rate Overshooting

Output Gaps and Robust Monetary Policy Rules

From Inflation to Exchange Rate Targeting: Estimating the Stabilization

Transparency and the Response of Interest Rates to the Publication of Macroeconomic Data

Boom or gloom? Examining the Dutch disease in two-speed economies

Monetary Policy report October 2015

THE TRADEOFF BETWEEN EFFICIENCY AND MACROECONOMIC STABILIZATION

Does domestic output gap matter for ination in a small open economy?

Comments on Monetary policy in Sweden since 1992

Are inflation expectations differently formed when countries are part of a Monetary Union?

Monetary Policy Objectives

Commentary: Challenges for Monetary Policy: New and Old

Monetary Policy. Modern Monetary Policy Regimes: Mandate, Independence, and Accountability. 1. Mandate. 1. Mandate. Monetary Policy: Outline

Discussion of paper by Gaston Gelos and Yulia Ustyugova on "Inflation responses to commodity price shocks how and why do countries differ?

Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging economies: The case of India

Transparency and predictability in monetary policy 1

The Short-Run Tradeoff between Inflation and Unemployment. Chapter 33

Setting the Operational Framework for Producing Inflation Forecasts

Stabilization Policy and the AS/AD

Assessing the Performance of Inflation Targeting. in East Asian economies

Symmetric or Asymmetric Monetary Policy Rules. in Different Countries?

Do Central Banks Respond to Exchange Rate Movements? Some New Evidence from Structural Estimation

This PDF is a selection from a published volume from the National Bureau of Economic Research

Cheolbeom Park and Sookyung Park

1 A Simple Model of the Term Structure

WHAT DOES THE HOUSE PRICE-TO-

Intermediate Macroeconomics: Economics 301 Exam 1. October 4, 2012 B. Daniel

Transmission of fiscal policy shocks into Romania's economy

The Macroeconometric model for Italy - MeMo-It

Canada s Pioneering Experience with a Flexible Exchange Rate in the 1950s: (Hard) Lessons Learned for Monetary Policy in a Small Open Economy.

WHAT DO FINANCIAL MARKET DATA TELL US ABOUT MONETARY POLICY TRANSPARENCY?

Chapter 25. Aggregate Demand and Supply Analysis

Measures of inflation used in inflation projections- experiences of the selected European countries. Karolina Tura * November 2014

This PDF is a selection from a published volume from the National Bureau of Economic Research. Volume Title: The Inflation-Targeting Debate

Discussion of DSGE Models for Monetary Policy. Discussion of

Inflation Targeting by Lars E.O. Svensson Princeton University CEPS Working Paper No. 144 May 2007

Monetary Policy and the Open Economy. Jordi Galí. July 2007

Faculdade de Economia da Universidade de Coimbra

Liquidity Matters: Money Non-Redundancy in the Euro Area Business Cycle

Economic policy. Monetary policy (part 2)

Int. Statistical Inst.: Proc. 58th World Statistical Congress, 2011, Dublin (Session CPS001) p approach

Do Inflation Targeting Central Banks Focus On Inflation? - An Analysis For Ten Countries

Imperfect Knowledge, Asset Price Swings and Structural Slumps: A Cointegrated VAR Analysis of their Interdependence

Assessing the fit of small open economy DSGEs. Troy Matheson. December JEL classification: C51,E52,F41.

NEW CONSENSUS MACROECONOMICS AND KEYNESIAN CRITIQUE. Philip Arestis Cambridge Centre for Economic and Public Policy University of Cambridge

INFLATION TARGETING BETWEEN THEORY AND REALITY

Contributions. Further contributions ABM plan to use latent instead of observed factors for foreign

Global shocks, economic fluctuations and timeliness of monetary policy.

Estimating the effects of forward guidance in rational expectations models

1 The empirical relationship and its demise (?)

Bayesian Analysis of DSGE Models with Regime Switching

Macroeconomics. Based on the textbook by Karlin and Soskice: Macroeconomics: Institutions, Instability, and the Financial System

National Income & Business Cycles

Comments for Terms of Trade Shocks and Investment in Commodity Exporter Economies by Fornero, Kirchner and Yany

Session 16. Review Session

Optimal Perception of Inflation Persistence at an Inflation-Targeting Central Bank

Independent Review of the Operation of Monetary Policy in New Zealand: Report to the Minister of Finance

Shocks, frictions and monetary policy Frank Smets

Klaus Schmidt-Hebbel. Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile. Carl E. Walsh. University of California at Santa Cruz

Escaping the Great Recession 1

Near-Rationality and Inflation in Two Monetary Regimes

INTRODUCTORY ECONOMICS

A Bayesian-Estimated Model of Inflation Targeting in South Africa. THOMAS HARJES and LUCA ANTONIO RICCI

Can 123 Variables Say Something About Inflation in Malaysia?

Optimal Monetary Policy

SUMMER EXAMINATIONS 2014

Monetary Policy, Asset Prices and Inflation in Canada

Commentary: Using models for monetary policy. analysis

NBER WORKING PAPER SERIES THE FEDERAL RESERVE, EMERGING MARKETS, AND CAPITAL CONTROLS: A HIGH FREQUENCY EMPIRICAL INVESTIGATION.

Topic 4: Introduction to Exchange Rates Part 1: Definitions and empirical regularities

GDP, Share Prices, and Share Returns: Australian and New Zealand Evidence

紅石國際教育中心. Red Rock Institute & Publishing

How Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Mexico and Peru have responded to terms of trade shocks during inflation targeting?

International Monetary Policy Coordination and Financial Market Integration

Transcription:

Discussion of Monetary Policy and Exchange Rate Stabilization in Norway and Sweden By Hilde C. Bjørnland and Junior Maih Reform Capacity and Macroeconomic Performance in the Nordic Countries Copenhagen Business School Roberto M. Billi Sveriges Riksbank September 20-21, 2013

The plan for this discussion: 1 Why the analysis is relevant? 2 How the authors proceed? 3 What do they find? 4 And, what next to consider in the analysis?

On the role of the exchange rate for monetary policy In theory, international trade can lead central banks to explicitly take into account the exchange rate in setting policy. Whether central banks, in actuality, react systematically to the exchange rate to stabilize the business cycle is debatable. Empirical evidence suggests that some inflation targeting central banks do respond to the exchange rate. Namely, Lubik and Schorfheide (2007) argue that, for instance, Bank of Canada and the Bank of England include the nominal exchange rate in their policy rule, while the central banks of Australia and New Zealand do not.

On the role of the exchange rate for monetary policy In theory, international trade can lead central banks to explicitly take into account the exchange rate in setting policy. Whether central banks, in actuality, react systematically to the exchange rate to stabilize the business cycle is debatable. Empirical evidence suggests that some inflation targeting central banks do respond to the exchange rate. Namely, Lubik and Schorfheide (2007) argue that, for instance, Bank of Canada and the Bank of England include the nominal exchange rate in their policy rule, while the central banks of Australia and New Zealand do not.

On the role of the exchange rate for monetary policy In theory, international trade can lead central banks to explicitly take into account the exchange rate in setting policy. Whether central banks, in actuality, react systematically to the exchange rate to stabilize the business cycle is debatable. Empirical evidence suggests that some inflation targeting central banks do respond to the exchange rate. Namely, Lubik and Schorfheide (2007) argue that, for instance, Bank of Canada and the Bank of England include the nominal exchange rate in their policy rule, while the central banks of Australia and New Zealand do not.

On the role of the exchange rate for monetary policy In theory, international trade can lead central banks to explicitly take into account the exchange rate in setting policy. Whether central banks, in actuality, react systematically to the exchange rate to stabilize the business cycle is debatable. Empirical evidence suggests that some inflation targeting central banks do respond to the exchange rate. Namely, Lubik and Schorfheide (2007) argue that, for instance, Bank of Canada and the Bank of England include the nominal exchange rate in their policy rule, while the central banks of Australia and New Zealand do not.

A simple, structural open economy model Rather than estimating policy reaction functions in a univariate setting, the authors pursue a multivariate approach by estimating the entire structural model. The model is based on Lubik and Schorfheide (JME, 2007) and, in turn, on Galí and Monacelli (REStud, 2005). Specifically, the model consists of a forward-looking (open economy) IS-equation and a Phillips curve. Monetary policy is described by an interest rate rule, while the exchange rate is introduced via the definition of the CPI and under the assumption of PPP. The technical novelty is that, however, the estimation procedure allows for regime switching. Both the policy rule coeffi cients and the variability of the structural shocks buffeting the economy can change over time.

A simple, structural open economy model Rather than estimating policy reaction functions in a univariate setting, the authors pursue a multivariate approach by estimating the entire structural model. The model is based on Lubik and Schorfheide (JME, 2007) and, in turn, on Galí and Monacelli (REStud, 2005). Specifically, the model consists of a forward-looking (open economy) IS-equation and a Phillips curve. Monetary policy is described by an interest rate rule, while the exchange rate is introduced via the definition of the CPI and under the assumption of PPP. The technical novelty is that, however, the estimation procedure allows for regime switching. Both the policy rule coeffi cients and the variability of the structural shocks buffeting the economy can change over time.

A simple, structural open economy model Rather than estimating policy reaction functions in a univariate setting, the authors pursue a multivariate approach by estimating the entire structural model. The model is based on Lubik and Schorfheide (JME, 2007) and, in turn, on Galí and Monacelli (REStud, 2005). Specifically, the model consists of a forward-looking (open economy) IS-equation and a Phillips curve. Monetary policy is described by an interest rate rule, while the exchange rate is introduced via the definition of the CPI and under the assumption of PPP. The technical novelty is that, however, the estimation procedure allows for regime switching. Both the policy rule coeffi cients and the variability of the structural shocks buffeting the economy can change over time.

A simple, structural open economy model Rather than estimating policy reaction functions in a univariate setting, the authors pursue a multivariate approach by estimating the entire structural model. The model is based on Lubik and Schorfheide (JME, 2007) and, in turn, on Galí and Monacelli (REStud, 2005). Specifically, the model consists of a forward-looking (open economy) IS-equation and a Phillips curve. Monetary policy is described by an interest rate rule, while the exchange rate is introduced via the definition of the CPI and under the assumption of PPP. The technical novelty is that, however, the estimation procedure allows for regime switching. Both the policy rule coeffi cients and the variability of the structural shocks buffeting the economy can change over time.

Norway and Sweden are similar, yet different Regarding similarities, foremost, both countries have successfully adopted inflation targeting. Regarding differences, the business cycle has become more stable in Sweden since the early 2000s, as tables 1 and 2 show. Another difference, monetary policy has been reacting less to the exchange rate since the early 1980s, as table 3 shows.

Norway and Sweden are similar, yet different Regarding similarities, foremost, both countries have successfully adopted inflation targeting. Regarding differences, the business cycle has become more stable in Sweden since the early 2000s, as tables 1 and 2 show. Another difference, monetary policy has been reacting less to the exchange rate since the early 1980s, as table 3 shows.

Norway and Sweden are similar, yet different Regarding similarities, foremost, both countries have successfully adopted inflation targeting. Regarding differences, the business cycle has become more stable in Sweden since the early 2000s, as tables 1 and 2 show. Another difference, monetary policy has been reacting less to the exchange rate since the early 1980s, as table 3 shows.

Sweden has a more stable business cycle than Norway

Policy reaction to exchange rate less pronounced in Sweden than in Norway

Some tests may help clarify the empirical findings Impose the restriction that the central bank does not react systematically to the exchange rate. Can, then, show whether such restriction is actually rejected by the data. The DSGE model imposes cross-equation restrictions in the estimation of the policy rule, while a statistical model does not. Compare the DSGE model estimates to statistical model estimates, to assess the role of the cross-equation restrictions.

Some tests may help clarify the empirical findings Impose the restriction that the central bank does not react systematically to the exchange rate. Can, then, show whether such restriction is actually rejected by the data. The DSGE model imposes cross-equation restrictions in the estimation of the policy rule, while a statistical model does not. Compare the DSGE model estimates to statistical model estimates, to assess the role of the cross-equation restrictions.