Principles of economics Central banking and Monetary policy

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
AP Macro Review Fun with formulas!.
Advertisements

The Fed and The Interest Rates
Part 2 Who does it? How they do it?
Free Response Macro Unit #5. 1) The Bank of Redwood has 1,000,000 in total reserves and the reserve ratio is 20%. Draw a correctly labeled T-account which.
Federal Reserve and Monetary Policy. Formal Structure of the Fed THE FEDERAL RESERVE (FED)
Roger LeRoy Miller © 2012 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Economics Today, Sixteenth Edition Chapter 16: Domestic and International Dimensions.
Principles of economics Central banking and Monetary policy Tomislav Herceg, PhD.
The Federal Reserve. Federal Reserve Basics: Considered the Nation’s central bank Does not serve individuals and businesses; its customers are thousands.
Entering Bernanke’s Domain.  Fundamental Questions ◦ What is money? ◦ Where does money come from? ◦ What role do banks play in the macro economy?  Important.
The Federal Reserve System
Chapter 14 The Monetary Policy Approach to Stabilization.
Chapter 33 Interest Rates and Monetary Policy McGraw-Hill/Irwin
 Monetary policy- changes in the money supply to fight inflations or recessions.
Monetary Policy Tools. Monetary Policy Federal Reserve Act of 1913 created the Federal Reserve System –“The Fed” provides the U.S. banking system with.
Money in the Economy Mmmmmmm, money!. The Money Supply M1:Currency + travelers checks + checkable deposits M2:M1 + small time deposits + overnight repurchase.
Money in the Economy Mmmmmmm, money!. The Money Supply M1:Currency + travelers checks + checkable deposits. M2:M1 + small time deposits + overnight repurchase.
Monetary Policy Chapter 14 Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Monetary policy Gene H Chang University of Toledo.
33 Monetary Policy McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 15.
Eco 200 – Principles of Macroeconomics Chapter 14: Monetary Policy.
16 Interest Rates and Monetary Policy McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Interest Rates and Monetary Policy Chapter 34 McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2015 by McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved.
Chapter 15 Monetary Policy. Money Market – determines interest rate Demand for Money Transactions Speculative Precautionary Supply of money – controlled.
1 Monetary Policy Ch Introduction Fed’s Board of Governor formulates policy, 12 Federal Reserve Banks implement policy Fundamental objective of.
Chapter 13-4 The Federal Reserve System. The Federal Reserve  A central bank is an institution that oversees and regulates the banking system and controls.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Chapter 17: Interest Rates and Monetary Policy Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Monetary Policy Econ  Key player in the financial markets: CENTRAL BANKS: Every sovereign nation has a bank which is the ‘lender of the last.
Macro Review Day 3. The Multiplier Model 28 The Multiplier Equation Multiplier equation is an equation that tells us that income equals the multiplier.
Macroeconomics The study of behavior and decision making of entire economies.
INTEREST RATES AND MONETARY POLICY McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Monetary Policy. Money Market A model showing the total supply of and demand for money in a nation. The liquid money available in a nation, including.
Interest Rates and Monetary Policy
16.2 Monetary Policy.
Tools to adjust the Money Supply
Module 27 & 28 & The Federal Reserve Monetary Policy
Chapter 16 Interest Rates and Monetary Policy McGraw-Hill/Irwin
CENTRAL BANKING.
Chapter 9.
The Influence of Monetary and Fiscal Policy on Aggregate Demand
Chapter 10 Interest Rates & Monetary Policy
CENTRAL BANKING.
I. THE FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
Actions of the Federal Reserve
Unit 4: Money, Banking, and Monetary Policy
The Federal Reserve and The Supply and Cost of Credit
Basic Finance The Federal Reserve
Monetary Policy.
AP Macroeconomics Monetary Policy.
Monetary Policy.
AP Macroeconomics Final Exam Review.
The Federal Reserve and Monetary Policy
Money, Money Supply, Bank Accounting, & Fiscal and Monetary Policy
Sponge Quiz #1: In Year 1, the cost of a market basket of goods was $720. In Year 2, the cost of the same basket was $780. What was the consumer price.
Ch. 18 ECONOMIC POLICY.
Chapter 15 Monetary Policy and Bank Regulation
Macro Free Responses Since 1995
Chapter 9.
Federal Reserve and Central Banking
Actions of the Federal Reserve
Section 5.
The Fed and Monetary Policy
Please listen to the audio as you work through the slides
Conduct of Monetary Policy: Goals and Targets
THE FEDERAL RESERVE AND MONETARY POLICY
Demand, Supply, and Equilibrium in the Money Market
The Fed and Monetary Policy
The Influence of Monetary and Fiscal Policy on Aggregate Demand
Monetary Policy.
Presentation transcript:

Principles of economics Central banking and Monetary policy Tomislav Herceg, PhD

Central Bank The most important macroeconomic policy maker Banks of all the banks, monopolist in the money issue Croatian National Bank (Hrvatska narodna banka) was founded in 1990. Other central banks: EU: ECB (European Central Bank) www.ecb.europa.eu USA: FED (Federal Reserve District) www.federalreserve.gov

Central bank properties One of 4 pillars of the state, autonomous towards central government Council of governors set by the parliament, not by the government Its activities form national monetary policy Governed by the Council (for HNB): Executive board – governor and 4 vice governors. External members – 8 councilors

Monetary policy Macroeconomic policy created by the central bank using supply of money management 3 forms: Expansive (M grows faster than GDP) Restrictive (M grows slower than GDP) Neutral (M grows at the same pace as GDP)

Policy objectives of the CB Economic growth (gy) in line with the economy’s potential to expand High employment (low u) Low inflation (Π) Moderate interest rates (i)

CB operations Open-market operations: buying and selling government securities (bonds and bills) Discount-rate policy (setting discount rate at which banks can borrow money) Reserve requirement policy (setting legal requirement on deposits in banks) Forex operations (buying and selling foreign exchange) => These operations alter supply of money M, in other words, these are tools of monetary policy

Open market operations By buying and selling government bonds and bills supply of money changes: when CB sells bonds, M falls, when CB buys bonds, M rises. Open market operations are conducted in the REPO auctions. The most used monetary instrument

Discount-Rate policy CB announces discount rate at which commercial banks can borrow money from CB. Rarely used in Croatia, banks rather borrow one from another due to tight controls of banks that use CB loans. Currently at 7%

Reserve requirements By changing reserve rate r monetary multiplier changes: m = 1/r. Monetary aggregates in Croatia: M1: cash and deposits on current accounts M1a: M1 + state deposits M4: all liquid assets (Mill. HRK) Sept. 2014 Reserve money 62.746,1 Money M1 63.824,1 Money M1a 65.231,6 Broadest money M4 282.533,6

Open economy monetary policy Domestic currency is affected by foreign holding of domestic currency. If too much money enters economy central bank has sterilize it by contracting supply of money M. Exchange rate mechanism is crucial in that process: Fixed exchange rate: country pegs against other currency at fixed exchange rate and has to adjust its economy so as to keep that rate. Floating exchange rate: exchange rate freely changes Operated floated exchange rate (snake in the tunnel): exchange rate floats between certain endpoints

HRK/€ Croatian kuna peggs against Euro in an operated floating exchange regime (mostly between 7.2 HRK and 7.6 HRK per EUR):

Monetary transmission mechanism MTM is the route by which changes of money supply M affect output Y, employment E, prices P and inflation Π. MTM with restrictive monetary policy: Sale of government securities (or increase in the reserve requirement, or sale of foreign currency) Money supply is reduced Interest rates go up Investment falls Reduction of aggregate demand, output and employment and inflation 𝒓↑→𝑴↓→𝒊↑→𝑰,𝑪,𝑰𝑴↓→𝑨𝑫↓,𝒀↓,𝝅↓,𝒖↑

Money market Demand for money is deducted from (a) need to conduct transaction and (b) desire to save Supply of money is created by CB operations in the commercial bank system The intercept of L and M determine interest rate i M M = supply of money L = demand for money

Money market shifts Restrictive monetary policy effect -money supply contracts -i rises, Y falls Input price rise which causes inflation: -L rises -i rises i M L M’ i M L’ L

Monetary transmission mechanism graph (expansive monetary policy) 𝒓↓→𝑴↑→𝒊↓→𝑰,𝑪,𝑰𝑴↑→𝑨𝑫↑,𝒀↑,𝝅↑,𝒖↓ i i M M’ Id = investment demand When Y approaches potential output monetary expansion leads only to inflation L I(i) M I Potential output TE I P AD’ AD’ AS AD AD 45° 45° Y I Y

Effects of monetary expansion in the long run Milton Friedman and his monetaristic school of economic thought believe that in the long run monetary expansion leads only to higher level of prices and output goes back to its previous level Why? Because AS tends to be vertical in the long run and because inflation caused by ME causes a shift of money demand L causing i to rise, thus reducing I and AD and everything goes back. i M L’ L

Phillips curve Phillips curve shows relation between inflation and unimployment. In the short run lower unimployment can be „bought” by higher inflation (negatively sloped short run Phillips curve). Higher inflation leads to rise in interest rates which causes I and thus AD to fall which lifts Phillips curve upwards =>In the long run Phillips curve is equal to the NAIRU – Non Accelerated Inflation Rate of Unemployment π NAIRU = long run Phillips curve short run Phillips curves u

Okun’s law Okun’s law is empirical rule observed in the USA. It says that 1% increase in the unemployment above its natural level (NAIRU) causes a gap between current and potential GDP to increase by 2%. Natural rate of unemployment is the rate of unemployment at potential level of output. Cyclical unemployment is the difference between current and natural u.

Okun’s law in USA and EU USA: 𝑢 𝑡 − 𝑢 𝑡−1 =−0,4 𝑔 𝑦𝑡 −3%

Exercise 1 Liabilities of Croatian National Bank were: Find M1 and and share of cash in M1

solution M1 = cash + current account deposits Share of cash in M1: Cash/M1

Exercise 2: CNB buys 50 Mill. HRK of national bonds. M1 was 4000 Mill. HRK, cash 1400 Mill. HRK, and required reserves (OR) were 800 Mill. HRK. Calculate: a) current account deposits b) required reserve rate c) money supply mupltiplier d) new deposits e) M1 after multiplication proces

Solution M1 = 4000, Cash = 1400, OR = 800 a) Current account deposits: D = M1 – Cash = 4000 – 1400 = 2600 Bill. HRK b) Required reserve rate r = OR/D * 100 = 800/2600 * 100 = 30,77% c) Money supply multiplier m = 1/r = = 1/0,3077 = 3,25

d) new deposits ND = m * deposit increase deposits increase = 50 Mill. HRK ND = 3,25×50 = 162,5 Mill. HRK e) New M1 M1’ = M1 + ND= 4000 + 162,5 = 4162,5 Mill. HRK