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Summary of Courses in Finance MACROFINANCE MONETARY POLICY

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I. MONETARY POLICY IN A CLOSED ECONOMY. I.1. MONEY CREATION AND THE INSTRUMENTS OF MONETARY POLICY ... deep degression 'Credit crunch' CB credibility no endogeneity ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Summary of Courses in Finance MACROFINANCE MONETARY POLICY


1
Summary of Courses in FinanceMACRO-FINANCEMONE
TARY POLICY
  • Dr. Tarafás Imre
  • 2007

2
MACRO-FINANCE
  • I. MONETARY POLICY IN A CLOSED ECONOMY
  • I.1. MONEY CREATION AND THE INSTRUMENTS OF
    MONETARY POLICY
  • I.1.A. THE CREATION OF MONEY
  • I.1.B. THE DESTRUCTION OF MONEY
  • I.1.C. UNCERTANTIES
  • I.1.D. THE INSTRUMENTS OF MONETARY POLICY
  • I.2. EXO- OR ENDOGENEITY OF MONEY
  • I.2.A. THE MONEYMARKET, THE BANKS ASSET AND
    LIABILITY MANAGEMENT
  • I.2.B. ENDOGENEITY STRUCTURAL AND ACCOMODATING
  • I.3. THE OBJECTIVES OF MONETARY POLICY
  • I.3.A. THE PHILLIPS-CURVE AND ITS CRITICS
  • I.3.B. A CONSENSUS APPROACH

3
MACRO-FINANCE
  • II. MONETARY POLICY IN AN OPEN ECONOMY
  • II.1. THE BALANCE OF PAYMENTS
  • II.1.A. DEVALUATION AND ELASTICITY
  • II.1.B. THE ABSORPTION APPROACH
  • II.2. EXCHANGE-RATE REGIMES
  • II.2.A. CRITIQUE OF THE FIXED RATE REGIME
  • II.2.B. FLEXIBLE EXCHANGE RATES AS PROPOSED
  • II.2.C. FLEXIBLE EXCHANGE RATES IN REALITY
  • II.2.D. LIBERALISATION, DEREGULATION
  • III. TOWARDS STABILITY IN EUROPE
  • III.1. THE ECONOMIC AND MONETARY UNION
  • III.2. JOINING THE EUROZONE

4
MONETARY POLICYIN A CLOSED ECONOMY
5
I.1. THE CREATION OF MONEY AND THE INSTRUMENTS OF
MONETARY POLICY
  • I.1.A. THE CREATION OF MONEY
  • Payment
  • with cash
  • transfer within the bank
  • transfer via Central Bank
  • Two-tier banking system CB and commercial banks
  • Bank of banks
  • Issuer of legal tender
  • Bank of the state

6
  • An example of money creation
  • Banknotes issued in the amount B
  • Bx kept in notes
  • B(1-x) deposited
  • B(1-x)y bank reserves
  • purposes of reserves

7
1.
credits granted by the banks
2.
credits granted by the banks
3.
n.
n8
8
  • Starting from the commercial banks
  • Credit extended in the amount M
  • Cash required
  • Mx for the public
  • M(1-x)y for reserves in banks
  • Altogether
  • Endogenous or exogenous money

9
I.1.B. THE DESTRUCTION OF MONEY
  • Creation through credit extension
  • 2. Credit ? deposit ? banknote (cash)
  • 1. Banknotes ?deposit ?credit ?banknote ?
    deposit
  • Creation of money by the CB credit to
    government
  • Repayment of credit
  • debt end deposit disappear
  • Foreign exchange purchase by bank
  • forex deposit
  • Foreign exchange sale by the bank
  • deposit ? foreign exchange
  • Credit risk bank failure

10
I.1.C. UNCERTAINITES
  • Ability to extend credit demand for credit
  • the business cycle
  • credit crunch the prudent bank
  • Stability of x and y
  • long-term trend
  • y influenced by x and the money market
  • seasonal fluctuations
  • geographical
  • extraordinary events (banking panic)

11
I.1.D. THE INSTRUMENTS OF MONETARY POLICY
  • INDIRECT INSTRUMENTS
  • Rediscounting
  • eligibility reserves in interest-bearing form
  • efficacity as a monetary instrument
  • passing on changes in i rate
  • banking systems dependence on CB
  • i elasticity of D for credit

12
  • Open market operations
  • P market price
  • N nominal value
  • r0 nominal i
  • r1 market rate of i
  • buy dear and sell cheap
  • repo active, passive

13
  • Simplified formula in reality, if maturity
    closer, more stabile
  • The structure of i
  • risk-free i risk premium
  • perception
  • (credit D, S)
  • If open market operation ? all i move

14
  • Efficacity of indirect instruments
  • In both cases
  • i elasticity of D for credit
  • cost
  • expectations
  • the prudent bank
  • inflation expectations

15
DIRECT INSTRUMENTS
  • Reserve requirements
  • prudential requirement monetary instrument
  • efficace when increased
  • too much so?
  • Downward efficacity?
  • Rediscounting quotas or ceilings
  • Directed lending, interest ceilings, etc.

16
PRESENT TRENDS
  • Profit-based incentives rather than regulations
  • circumventing regulations
  • indirect tax global competition
  • strengthening dependence on CB
  • Indirect instrument
  • open market operations
  • Lender of Last Resort

17
I.2. EXO- OR ENDOGENEITY OF MONEY
  • The creation of money
  • Creation by CB ? deposits in commercial banks ?
    drive to lend ? endogenous creation of money
  • Economic decisions ? D for credit, creation of
    money ? funding ? endogenous

18
I.2.A. THE MONEY MARKET, BANKS ASSET AND
LIABILITY MANAGEMENT
  • y bank by bank
  • too much or insufficient
  • 1-14 days, maybe several months
  • positions quickly changing or durable
  • re-allocation of quotes, etc.
  • CD (Certificate of Deposit) impact on reserves
  • Off-balance-sheet liabilities relying on the
    market
  • Liability management starting from D for credit

19
  • CB eligibility and liquid papers
  • selling buying of loans
  • Maturity, liquidity structure of A and L
  • m m limits everyday presence in both sides
  • borrowing, repo, selling, buying
  • structure of A and L
  • i and Xr expectations
  • Reserves ? 0
  • Technical conditions
  • data processing, decision-making, communication

20
I.2.B. STRUCTURAL AND ACCOMODATING ENDOGENEITY
  • Structural endogeneity
  • The international markets
  • Accommodating endogeneity
  • Consensus
  • When monetary policy ineffective no exogeneity
  • deep degression
  • Credit crunch
  • CB credibility no endogeneity

21
I.3. THE OBJECTIVES OF MONETARY POLICY
  • Under the gold standard
  • Achieving full employment
  • Budget deficits monetary consequences

22
I.3.A. A PHILLIPS-CURVE AND ITS CRITICISM
  • The price of full employment inflation
  • Phillips-curve
  • Excess S of labour - wages ?
  • Excess D for labour - wages ?
  • Any point on the curve

23
nominal wages, inflation annual
Unemployment,
24
  • Criticism by the monetarists
  • Inflation expectations
  • Accelerating inflation
  • The natural rate of unemployment
  • NAIRU

25
  • The efficiency of economic policies
  • Data availability
  • Understanding what the data say
  • Lags in response
  • Lags and excesses
  • Conclusion constant rate of growth of money
    supply
  • Orienting expectations
  • 3-5, some of it inflation
  • Technically 100 res. req.
  • Who lends?
  • Exogeneous money
  • Built-in stabilizers

26
I.3.B. A CONSENSUS APPROACH
  • No money illusion and no fast adapting
    expectations
  • Monetary policy unable to ensure full employment
  • But constant rate expansion of money S
    unacceptable
  • The threat of deflation
  • Downward rigidity of wages and prices
  • Debt-deflation spiral
  • Credible policy aiming at price stability
  • Dynamic inconsistency
  • Margins of error

27
II. MONETARY POLICY IN AN OPEN ECONOMY
II.1. THE BALANCE OF PAYMENTS
  • Closed or open economy
  • The current account (of bop)
  • current payments definitive
  • Foreign trade
  • i, investment income
  • Unrequited transfers

28
  • The capital (financial) accounts
  • The counterpart of current account imbalance
  • Long-term K
  • Foreign direct investment
  • Portfolio investment
  • Borrowings
  • Short-term K
  • Changes in foreign exchange reserves

29
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30
  • Any combination possible F-, F, T, T-
  • Statistical errors, omissions
  • Motives of K movements
  • Economic FDI
  • Financial lending
  • In-between portfolio
  • Financing the deficit
  • FDI long term impact in M
  • Borrowing
  • Long term but
  • Short term

31
  • Sustainability
  • Stock of foreign debt
  • Debt service
  • Forex reserves
  • Pressure to correct before unsustainability
  • Threat of liquidity solvency crisis
  • Protecting home business
  • Protecting home employment

32
II.1.A. DEVALUATION THE ELASTICITY APPROACH
  • The price elasticity of the supply of exports
  • Unutilized capacities
  • Domestic demand
  • The price elasticity of the D for exports
  • The price elasticity of the supply of imports
  • Sacrifice for the market
  • The price elasticity of the D for import
  • Competing domestic industries, substitution
  • Domestic demand

33
  • Devaluation helps, if
  • ex price elasticity of the supply of exports
  • Domestic currency
  • nx price elasticity of the D for exports
  • Foreign currency
  • em price elasticity of the supply of imports
  • Foreign currency
  • nm price elasticity of the D for imports
  • Domestic currency

34
  • If ex0 (no increase in X)
  • no changes in forex revenues
  • And em0 (foreign exporters cut prices)
  • forex expenditures decrease
  • Formula

35
  • If ex infinite
  • X can increase by any amount that D will take
  • And em infinite
  • Forex price of imports unchanged
  • Then devaluation helps, if

36
  • Devaluation perverse effects, if ex és em
    infinite nx and nm0
  • X price down, volume flat
  • M price and volume unchanged
  • May be initial effect the J-curve

Balance of trade
Date of devaluation
37
II.1.B. THE ABSORPTION APPROACH
  • Current account deficit excess of absorption
    over income
  • If elasticities favourable
  • X and Y up
  • M down and Y up
  • If price level rises
  • M prices up
  • sales diverted to X
  • Inflation real income - absorption

38
  • Current account deficit excess of absorption
    over income
  • YCIGX-M
  • YCST
  • X-M(S-I)(T-G)
  • X-MF
  • ACIG
  • Y-AF

39
  • To adjust absorption (to income)
  • devaluation maybe sufficient
  • restriction maybe needed
  • Low elasticities devaluation ? high
    inflationary, low income impact
  • Monetary restriction and devaluation
  • supplements or alternatives to each other
  • inflationary or deflationary context

domestic price level with devaluation
international price level domestic price
level with restriction
40
  • When prices are rigid downward
  • and foreign prices are stable
  • Restriction q instead of p
  • Marginal propensity to import gt 0
  • ?M / ?Y gt 0
  • Y ? ? M? ? F-
  • X?
  • A??Y? ?M? ?F
  • X?
  • either X ? Y? M? ? F
  • or X Ø Y? M? ? F
  • Combined policies
  • Inconsistent policies

41
II.2. XR REGIMES
II.2.A. CRITICISM OF THE FIXED XR REGIMES
upper
intervention points
lower
  • Reserves, restriction, conflicting objectives
  • Convertibility on current transactions or full

42
II.2.B. FLEXIBLE XR AS PROPOSED
  • The role of prices in a market economy
  • Automatic correction of bop imbalance
  • The stabilizing force speculation
  • R 0, or dirty
  • Restriction no more needed

43
II.2.C. FLEXIBLE X R REALITY
  • Since 1973, often dirty
  • The role of the oil price shock
  • the inflationary impact of huge changes in
    relative prices
  • Long experience with a shifting Phillips-curve

new energy prices
new average prices
average price level
non-energy prices, the favourable case
non-energy prices, the unfavourable case
44
  • The anchor disappears
  • Large numbers of possible paths
  • Different currencies in different phases
  • i and Xr volatility hugely increased
  • Speculation lost orientation and adds to
    instability

price level, high energy prices, unchanged
policy price level, actual policies price level
originally
45
II.2.D. LIBERALISATION, DEREGULATION
  • Removing barriers to international K movements
  • earlier restrictions, licencing systems
  • flexible Xr favourable to liberalization
  • lost efficacity of remaining restrictions
  • K movements disguised
  • transfer pricing
  • intracompany cash-flows
  • Fx turnover gt 50 times trade daily1900md USD

46
  • Real economy subordinated to K flows
  • early 80s high i in US
  • late 90s expected profits, stock market folly
  • K? ? Xr ? ? X?, M?
  • current account deficit
  • AgtY
  • C I G
  • Positive role of speculation
  • imposing sustainable policies on governments
  • Negative role of speculation destabilization
  • 1992 sterling, 1993 franc

47
III.2. JOINING TO THE EUROZONE
  • Preventing XR fluctuations, related uncertainty
  • If possibility is there in todays
    international monetary system
  • The Maastricht criteria
  • inflation the best 3 1,5 max
  • Xr stay within 15 band
  • i best 3 in inflation 2 max
  • budget max. 3, unless
  • Public debt max. 60, unless

48
  • Price level and relative prices
  • Services and the industrial price level
  • Balassa Samuelson effect
  • productivity? industry gt services
  • wages ? approx. the same
  • prices? servicesgt industry
  • the industrial price level and the Xr
  • Destabilizing Xr
  • Relative Unit Labour Cost 2001-5 ?25
  • F 8, budget deficit
  • i
  • risk appetite
  • Instability, sacrifice in growth, impact on
    budget and current account
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