Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging economies: The case of India Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik National Institute Public Finance and Policy March 14, 2014 Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 The 1 / 1ca
Outline Motivation Literature Contribution Model, data and calibration Results Policy implications Summary Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 The 2 / 1ca
Part I Motivation Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 The 3 / 1ca
Motivation Inflation persistently above target zone WPI, YoY (%) Inflation (%) 0 2 4 6 8 10 Target zone Average inflation 1995 1998 2001 2004 2007 2010 2013 Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 The 4 / 1ca
Motivation Inflation persistently above target zone CPI, YoY (%) Inflation (%) 0 5 10 15 20 Target zone Average inflation 1995 1998 2001 2004 2007 2010 2013 Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 The 5 / 1ca
Motivation Transition from fixed to flexible exchange rate regime Volatility in rupee-dollar exchange rate increased significantly after 2008 Annualised volatility (Per cent) 1 2 5 10 23 May '03 23 Mar '07 4.74 years 3.84 years 6.94 years 8.69 3.87 1.84 2000 2005 2010 Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 The 6 / 1ca
Motivation Transition from fixed to flexible exchange rate regime RBI s intervention in foreign exchange market declined significantly after 2008 23 May '03 23 Mar '07 Net RBI trading, Percent to M0 1.0 0.5 0.0 0.5 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 The 7 / 1ca
Motivation Despite monetary tightening, inflation pressures have persisted Interest rates (%) 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Call rate Repo rate Reverse repo rate 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 The 8 / 1ca
Motivation Rising inflationary expectations In absence of an alternative nominal anchor, inflationary expectations started rising and have persisted above 10% since 2010 Inflation (%) 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 Target CPI IW Inflation expectations 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 The 9 / 1ca
Motivation Questions What are the factors that have contributed to post-crisis business cycle fluctuations and inflation dynamics in India? Is aggregate demand a contributor to inflation pressure in India? Does monetary policy have a role to play? What would have been the post-crisis monetary policy stance in a counter-factual scenario of inflation-targeting (IT) central bank in India? Would monetary policy be successful in anchoring inflationary pressure in recent times under a hypothetical scenario of IT central bank? Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 10 The / 1ca
Part II Literature review Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 11 The / 1ca
Literature Literature review Micro-founded DSGE models with New-Keynesian features (Smets and Wouters, 2003; Gali, 2007; Gali and Gartler, 2009; Gali and Monacelli, 2008), which help in identifying: Factors contributing to business cycle fluctuations Welfare-based optimal monetary and fiscal policy rules under alternative policy regimes Recently developed FPAS models (Berg and Laxton, 2006; Laxton, Rose and Scott, 2009) apply reduced form semi-structural New-Keynesian model coherently with data and help in: Providing a practical guide to IT central banks to assess macroeconomic functioning of the country in a single framework Predicting future monetary policy path to contain inflation rate in the country at a desired level in medium to long term Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 12 The / 1ca
Literature review Literature Variants of FPAS models have been applied in countries with a existent, as well as those transitioning to, an IT framework Application by existing IT central banks: ECB, Australia, New Zealand Limited application to EMs: Kenya (Andrle, Berg, Morales, Portillo, and Vlcek, 2013), Sri Lanka (Anand, Ding, and Peiris, 2011) Implemented by Czech National Bank (Andrle, Hledik, Kamnik, Vlcek, 2009) Limited literature on India: Estimated new Keynesian closed economy model for India (Patra, Kapur, 2010) Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 13 The / 1ca
Part III Contribution Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 14 The / 1ca
Contribution Contribution First semi-structural New-Keynesian open economy model for India, capturing main macroeconomic mechanisms, useful for: Identification Of factors contributing to Indian business cycle fluctuations and inflation dynamics Prediction Of inflation, and corresponding policy rate, in the medium to long run Promoting Discussion on rules-based policy making in India Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 15 The / 1ca
Contribution Comparison of FPAS with other models DSGE: FPAS allows abstraction away from micro-foundations and deep-parameters, estimation of which is unreliable for EMs Structural time series models (SVAR, SVECM): They take policy parameters as given, and are unable to incorporate forward looking features. However, each equation in FPAS carries an economic interpretation. Ad-hoc ordering of variables in SVAR leads to identification problems. The FPAS framework is free of such mis-specification errors. Additionally, our model allows analysis of policy intervention under alternative policy parameters. Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 16 The / 1ca
Part IV Model, data and calibration Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 17 The / 1ca
Model, data and calibration Structural model for India Model Domestic block Aggregate demand (IS curve) Aggregate supply (Philips curve) Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 18 The / 1ca
Model, data and calibration Structural model for India Model Domestic block Aggregate demand (IS curve) ŷ t = α 1 y t 1 ˆ [α 2ˆr t 1 α 3 z t 1 ˆ ] + α 4 E t ŷ t+1 + α 5 ˆ Components: Lagged aggregate demand Real monetary conditions Real interest rate gap Real exchange rate gap Expected output gap Foreign output gap Exogenous shock Aggregate supply (Philips curve) yt + ɛŷ t Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 18 The / 1ca
Model, data and calibration Structural model for India Model Domestic block Aggregate demand (IS curve) Aggregate supply (Philips curve) π t = (1 θ 1 )π t 1 + θ 1 E t π t+1 + θ 2 rmc t + ɛ π t Components: Lagged inflation Expected inflation (E t π t+1 ) Real marginal costs Real exchange rate gap Output gap Exogenous shock Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 18 The / 1ca
Model, data and calibration Structural model for India Model Domestic & foreign block Monetary policy (Taylor rule) Exchange rate (UIP condition) Foreign block Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 19 The / 1ca
Model, data and calibration Structural model for India Model Domestic & foreign block Monetary policy (Taylor rule) i t = ρ 2 i t 1 + (1 ρ 2 )(i n t + ρ 3 (E t π t+4 π T t+4) + ρ 4 ŷ t ) + ɛ i t Components: Deviation of expected inflation from target/objective Deviation of output from potential Exogenous shock Exchange rate (UIP condition) Foreign block Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 19 The / 1ca
Model, data and calibration Structural model for India Model Domestic & foreign block Monetary policy (Taylor rule) Exchange rate (UIP condition) s t = 0.7E t s t+1 + 0.31s e t 1 + ( i t + i t + prem t )/4 + ɛ s t st e = s t 1 + 0.5( z + π T πss) s t = π T πt ss + z t Components: Domestic interest rate Foreign interest rate Premium Purchasing power parity condition Exogenous shock Foreign block Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 19 The / 1ca
Model, data and calibration Structural model for India Model Domestic & foreign block Monetary policy (Taylor rule) Exchange rate (UIP condition) Foreign block Modelled exogenously as an AR process, with constant drift representing the steady state of foreign variables Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 19 The / 1ca
Model, data and calibration Calibration of parameters Calibration and Steady-state values Calculated based on historical data, literature surveys and judgement about the Indian economy. Description Variable Value Inflation target πss T 5% Real interest rate trend r ss 2% Real exchange rate trend z ss 2 Output trend y ss 6.5% Foreign real interest rate trend r ss 0.5% Foreign inflation target πss 2% Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 20 The / 1ca
Data description Model, data and calibration Describing the data Series Variable Data used Output y GDP, factor cost (Base: 2004-05) Prices p Wholesale Price Index Nominal exchange rate s INR/USD Nominal interest rate i 91-day Treasury Bill rate Foreign demand y US GDP, market prices (Base: 2009) Foreign prices p US Consumer Price Index Foreign nominal interest rate i US 13-week Treasury Bill rate Range: 1996 Q1-2013 Q4 Source: Datastream Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 21 The / 1ca
Part V Results Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 22 The / 1ca
Results Model performance Fitted and actual WPI inflation, YoY (%) Inflation (%) 2 4 6 8 10 Fitted inflation Actual Target 2000 2003 2006 2009 2012 Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 23 The / 1ca
Results Monetary policy transmission in India: AD channel IRFs from MP shock Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 24 The / 1ca
Results Monetary policy transmission in India: AD channel IRFs from MP shock (Patra & Kapur 2010) Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 25 The / 1ca
Results Patterns in post-crisis Indian business cycle Output gap, per cent deviation from trend Per Cent 8 6 4 2 0 2 4 2000 2003 2006 2009 2012 Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 26 The / 1ca
Results Patterns in post-crisis Indian business cycle Real interest rate gap, per cent deviation from trend Per Cent 8 6 4 2 0 2 4 2000 2003 2006 2009 2012 Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 27 The / 1ca
Results Patterns in post-crisis Indian business cycle Real exchange rate gap, per cent deviation from trend Per Cent 10 5 0 5 2000 2003 2006 2009 2012 Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 28 The / 1ca
Results Factors affecting post-crisis business cycle Output gap Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 29 The / 1ca
Results Factors affecting post-crisis inflation dynamics Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 30 The / 1ca
Results Factors affecting post-crisis monetary policy Monetary policy Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 31 The / 1ca
Results Factors affecting post-crisis monetary policy Monetary policy Per Cent 2 4 6 8 10 Actual Taylor implied 2000 2003 2006 2009 2012 Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 32 The / 1ca
Part VI Policy implications Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 33 The / 1ca
Policy implications Post-crisis monetary policy stance Imagine an inflation targeting RBI in a post-crisis world They respond to deviations of inflation from target, and output gap from trend Could they have contained inflation and anchored expectations? Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 34 The / 1ca
Policy implications Post-crisis monetary policy stance: Inflation Comparison of actual and counterfactual inflation Inflation (%) 2 4 6 8 10 Predicted inflation Actual Target In sample forecast period 2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 35 The / 1ca
Policy implications Post-crisis monetary policy stance: Expected inflation In-sample forecasting, 2010 Q1-2013 Q4 Inflation (%) 5 0 5 10 15 Expected inflation Inflation Target In sample forecast period 2005 2007 2009 2011 2013 Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 36 The / 1ca
Part VII Conclusion Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 37 The / 1ca
Summary Summary Semi-structural New-Keynesian open economy model for India Demand plays a significant role in driving post-crisis inflationary pressure in India Monetary policy transmission via aggregate demand channel The model predicts tighter monetary policy during 2009 to beginning of 2011 implied by the Taylor rule Provides evidence for usefulness of inflation targeting in India Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 38 The / 1ca
Summary Thank you. Rudrani Bhattacharya Ila Patnaik (NIPFP) Monetary policy analysis in an inflation targeting framework in emerging March 14, economies: 2014 39 The / 1ca