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Chapter 14 Monetary Policy

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Page 1: Monetary Policy

Chapter 14Monetary Policy

Page 2: Monetary Policy

The Bank of Canada

Making Monetary Policy

When the BOC announces a policy change, its press release talks about the overnight rate or bank rate.

The Board meets eight times a year and formally approves interest rate decisions.

Page 3: Monetary Policy

Monetary Policy Indicators

Monetary policy indicators are the current features of the economy that the Bank looks at to determine whether it needs to apply the brake or the accelerator to influence future inflation, real GDP, and unemployment.

Currently, the overnight loans rate is the main monetary policy indicator.

Page 4: Monetary Policy

Monetary Policy Tools

Four Monetary Policy Tools

1. Required reserve ratio (no loner used in

Canada).

2. Bank rate and bankers’ deposit rate.

3. Open market operations.

4. Government deposit shifting

Page 5: Monetary Policy

Controlling the Quantity of Money

Page 6: Monetary Policy

Ripple Effects of Monetary Policy

MP to Lower Unemployment

If BOC buys securities in Open Market, AD shifts to the right to restore full employment.

Page 7: Monetary Policy

Ripple Effects of Monetary Policy

MP to Lower Inflation

Monetary policy decreases AD to restore full employment and avoid inflation.

Page 8: Monetary Policy

Ripple Effects of Monetary Policy

Time Lags in the Adjustment Process

The BOC needs a combination of good judgment and good luck to achieve its monetary policy goal of low and stable inflation and full employment.

The Bank is handicapped by the fact that the ripple effect of its actions are not entirely predictable.

Page 9: Monetary Policy

Ripple Effects of Monetary Policy

Money Target Versus Interest Rate Target

The BOC prefers to target the interest rate and change the quantity of money automatically if the demand for money fluctuates.

Page 10: Monetary Policy

Ripple Effects of Monetary Policy

Bank targets the interest rate.Fluctuations in the demand for monetary base now bring fluctuations in the quantity of money and hold the interest rate steady.

Page 11: Monetary Policy

The BOC sells securities in the open market.

This action mops up bank reserves. Some banks are short of reserves and seek to borrow reserves from other banks.

The overnight rate rises.

With fewer reserves, the banks make a smaller quantity of new loans each day and the quantity of money decreases.

How BOC Raises Interest Rates?

Page 12: Monetary Policy

1. The current interest rate is 5 % a year.

2. The Bank’s target interest rate is 6 % a year.

3. To raise the interest rate to the target, the BOC must sell securities in the open market and decrease the quantity of money to $98 billion.

Page 13: Monetary Policy

If the BOC fears recession, it acts to increase AD.

The BOC announces that it will lower the short-term interest rates.

To achieve this goal, the BOC buys securities in the open market.

This action increases bank reserves.

Flush with reserves, banks now seek to lend reserves to other banks.

The overnight rate falls.

With more reserves, the banks increase their lending and the quantity of money increases.

How BOC Lowers Interest Rate?

Page 14: Monetary Policy

1. The current interest rate is 5 % a year.

2. The Bank’s target is 4 % a year.

3. To lower the interest rate to the target, the BOC buys securities in the open market and increase the quantity of money to $102 billion.

Page 15: Monetary Policy

Suppose that the BOC increases the interest rate. Then

Investment and consumption expenditure decrease.

The dollar rises, and net exports decrease. A multiplier process induces a further decrease

in consumption expenditure and AD.

Ripple Effects of Monetary Policy

Page 16: Monetary Policy

Ripple Effects of Monetary Policy

Bank targets the quantity of money.

Fluctuations in the demand for monetary base bring unwanted fluctuations in the interest rate.

Page 17: Monetary Policy

The Multiplier Process

Taking these effects together, investment, consumption expenditure, and net exports are all interest-sensitive components of expenditure.

So a rise in the interest rate brings a decrease in AE.

Real GDP and disposable income decrease further, and so does consumption expenditure.

Real GDP growth slows, and the inflation rate slows.

Money Multiplier

Page 18: Monetary Policy

1. The BOC raises the interest rate and the quantity of investment decreases.

BOC’s Fight against Inflation

Investment demand curve.

The interest rate is 5 % a year and investment is $200 billion.

Page 19: Monetary Policy

2. Expenditure decreases by ∆I.

3. The multiplier induces additional expenditure cuts.

The AD curve shifts to AD1, real GDP decreases to potential GDP, and inflation is avoided.

Page 20: Monetary Policy

BOC’s Fight Against Recession

1. The BOC lowers the interest rate and the quantity of investment increases.

The interest rate is 5 % a year and investment is $200 billion.

Page 21: Monetary Policy

2. Expenditure increases by ∆I.

3. The multiplier induces additional expenditure.

The AD curve shifts to AD1, real GDP increases to potential GDP, and recession is avoided.

BANK OF CANADA AND MONETARY POLICY

Page 22: Monetary Policy

The Size of the Multiplier effect of monetary policy depends on the sensitivity of expenditure plans to the interest rate.

The larger the effect of a change in the interest rate on AE, the greater is the money multiplier and the smaller is the change in the interest rate that achieves the BOC’s objective.

Size of Multiplier

Page 23: Monetary Policy

Monetary policy has an advantage over fiscal policy because it cuts out the law-making time lags.

But monetary policy shares the other two limitations of fiscal policy:

• Estimating potential GDP is hard• Economic forecasting is error-prone.

Limitations of Monetary Policy

Page 24: Monetary Policy

How should fiscal policy and monetary policy be used?

Two historical schools of thoughts on Macroeconomic policy: Keynesians and monetarists.

The debate concerns three issues:• Fiscal policy versus monetary policy• Interest rate versus quantity of money• Real GDP versus inflation

Macroeconomic Policy Debates

Page 25: Monetary Policy

Fiscal Policy Versus Monetary Policy

Either tool can be used to influence AD, so the choice between them turns on their side effects:

• Fiscal policy influences the allocation of resources and the distribution of income and wealth.

• Monetary policy influences the allocation of resources between consumption and investment and exports and imports.

Stabilization policy relies on both tools.

Macroeconomic Policy Debates

Page 26: Monetary Policy

Interest Rate Versus Quantity of Money

Set the interest rate and let the quantity of money be determined by the demand for money, or

Set the growth rate of the quantity of money and let the interest rate fluctuate with the demand for money.• Monetarists favor a target for the money growth rate• Keynesians favor a target for the interest rate

The BOC is Keynesian on this issue. It sets the overnight rate and has no target for money growth.

Macroeconomic Policy Debates

Page 27: Monetary Policy

Real GDP Versus Inflation

Keynesians place more weight on real GDP.• They want policy to restore real GDP to potential

GDP quickly. They pay little attention to inflation.

Monetarists place more weight on inflation.• They want the inflation rate slowed if it rises and no

action if the inflation rate is low.

BOC monetarist on this issue.

Macroeconomic Policy Debates

Page 28: Monetary Policy

The Bank of Canada in Action

Gerald Bouey’s Fight Against Inflation In the early 1980s, when Gerald Bouey was

governor of the BOC, the Bank slowed the growth rate of money and interest rates rose dramatically.

Real GDP decreased in a deep recession.

The unemployment rate increased and remained high through the 1980s.

The inflation rate slowed.

Page 29: Monetary Policy

The Bank of Canada in Action

John Crow’s Push for Price Stability

John Crow became governor of the BOC in 1987.

Crow was a fierce inflation fighter.

He brought the inflation rate down to less than 3%, but at the cost of another recession during 1990-1991.

Page 30: Monetary Policy

The Bank of Canada in ActionGordon Thiessen’s and David Dodge’s Balancing Acts

Gordon Thiessen succeeded John Crow as governor of the BOC in 1994.

Thiessen held the inflation rate inside its target range and helped set the scene for the strong expansion of the late 1990s and early 2000s.

David Dodge succeeded Thiessen in 2001.Dodge attempted to keep the economy expanding through a U.S. recession and permitted inflation to exceed its target for the first time since inflation targeting began.