Asset Price Bubbles and Monetary Policy: A Multivariate Extension By Andrew Filardo, BIS Prepared for a workshop on “Fundamental and Non-fundamental Asset.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 16 The Conduct of Monetary Policy: Strategy and Tactics.
Advertisements

1 Central Bank Macroeconomic Modeling Workshop Jerusalem, October 2009 Discussion on Financial Shocks and Optimal Monetary Policy in Small Open Economies.
Inflation Targeting After the Financial Crisis Lars E.O. Svensson Sveriges Riksbank Speech at Reserve Bank of India’s International Research Conference.
Instability in Financial Markets: Sources and Remedies The View from Economic History Institute for New Economic Thinking Annual Conference 2012 Moritz.
Inflation Targeting at 20: Achievements and Challenges By Scott Roger IMF Prepared for the 6 th Norges Bank Monetary Policy Conference Oslo, June.
The transmission mechanism of monetary policy Banco Central do Brasil conference: “One year of inflation targeting” 10th July 2000 Alec Chrystal Bank of.
ASSET BUBBLES, MONETARY POLICY AND RISKS TO THE ECONOMY A. G. (Tassos) Malliaris Professor of Economics and Finance Loyola University Chicago EURO WORKING.
Asset Prices and the Global Financial Crisis of Marc Hayford A.G. Malliaris Loyola University Chicago International Banking, Economics & Finance.
DSGE Modelling at Central Banks: Country Practices and How it is Used in Policy Making Haris Munandar Bank Indonesia SEACEN-CCBS/BOE-BSP Workshop on DSGE.
How Important Should Bubbles Be In The Conduct of Monetary Policy? By Andrew Filardo, BIS Prepared for the 10 th Dubrovnik Economic Conference 24 June.
Should policy be active or passive?
Pump Primer: Write the five key questions about Macroeconomics Policy.
1 June 30, th Dubrovnik Economic Conference Paul Wachtel Stern School of Business. New York University.
Monetarism & Monetary Targeting Rules not discretion!! End monetary mischief!!! MV = PY … automatic stabilization??? M1? M2?? Innovations Does targeting.
Three Equation Model IS-PC-MR
FNCE 3020 Financial Markets and Institutions Fall Semester 2005 Lecture 3 The Behavior of Interest Rates.
What can Government do to foster Economic Growth and Equity? The Role of Monetary Policy Cathy Minehan Economic Growth with Equity Open Classroom PPS 225.
In this chapter you will learn:
© 2008 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics R. Glenn Hubbard, Anthony Patrick O’Brien, 2e. 1 of 39 Monetary Policy, Toll Brothers, and the Housing.
Signals: Implications for Business Cycles and Monetary Policy Lawrence Christiano, Cosmin Ilut, Roberto Motto, and Massimo Rostagno.
Connecting Money and Prices: Irving Fisher’s Quantity Equation M × V = P × Y The Quantity Theory of Money V = Velocity of money The average number of times.
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc. Goals of Monetary Policy Price stability High employment Economic growth Financial market and institution stability.
C h a p t e r twenty-six © 2006 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics R. Glenn Hubbard, Anthony Patrick O’Brien—1 st ed. Prepared by: Fernando &
Chapter 21. Stabilization policy with rational expectations
What can Government do to foster Economic Growth and Equity? The Role of Monetary Policy Cathy Minehan Economic Growth with Equity Open Classroom PPS 225.
The Conduct of Monetary Policy: Strategy and Tactics
1 Lecture 31: Monetary policy goals, strategy and tactics – part one Mishkin Ch16 – part A page
Introduction to Money and Banking Chapter One. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.1 | 2 Money flows through the modern world with.
The Zero Lower Bound, ECB Interest Rate Policy and the Financial Crisis Stefan Gerlach and John LewisDiscussion Gert Peersman Ghent University.
Monetary Policy Rules in Practice: Some International Evidence By Richard Clarida, Jordi Gali & Mark Gertler Presented by Alyaa Ezzat Sept
Targeting inflation in Asia and the Pacific Andrew Filardo* Hans Genberg** *Bank for International Settlements **Hong Kong Monetary Authority The views.
One Year of Inflation Targeting in Brazil Implementing Inflation Targeting in Brazil Joel Bogdanski Alexandre Tombini Sérgio Ribeiro da Costa Werlang.
Asset Price Bubbles and Monetary Policy Pongsak Luangaram Chulalongkorn University December 2008.
Discussion by J.C. Rochet (Zürich) Prepared for the Riksbank Workshop, Stockholm November 12, 2010.
Monetary Policy Responses to Food and Fuel Price Volatility Eswar Prasad Cornell University, Brookings Institution and NBER.
World Economic Outlook Warwick J. McKibbin ANU & The Brookings Institution Prepared for 1999 Conference of Economists Business Symposium.
Discussion Monetary Policy and Financial Stability: Is there a conflict? Ami Barnea, Yoram Landskroner and Meir Sokoler Paul Wachtel New York University.
An Overview of the Great Depression
Macroeconomics Chapter 151 Money and Business Cycles I: The Price-Misperceptions Model C h a p t e r 1 5.
Monetary Policy Challenges Posed by Asset Price Booms Stephen G. Cecchetti Rosenberg Professor of Global Finance.
Liberal finance, dear money and economic crisis Geoff Tily July 2009.
Policy Rules and the Conduct of Monetary Policy in Canada Pierre Duguay Deputy Governor.
11 Andrew Filardo Bank for International Settlements Comments on “Flexible Inflation Targeting & Financial Stability: Is It Enough to Stabilise Inflation.
BY: DALAL ALARBEED Effective Monetary Policy in a Low Interest Rate Environment.
C h a p t e r sixteen © 2007 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Essentials of Economics R. Glenn Hubbard, Anthony Patrick O’Brien Prepared by: Fernando.
Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Chapter 12 Managing the Economy: Monetary Policy.
The Current Economic Situation or How Did We Get Here? Fed Challenge 2008 Orientation Program Federal Reserve Bank of New York Raymond Stone Stone & McCarthy.
Issues in the Choice of a Monetary Regime for India Warwick J. McKibbin & Kanhaiya Singh.
MANKIW'S MACROECONOMICS MODULES
Inflation Targeting in Emerging Market Economies Arminio Fraga Ilan Goldfajn André Minella Preliminary Version April 2003 Comments are Welcome.
14-1 Copyright © 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. C H A P T E R 14 The Federal Reserve and Monetary Policy Copyright © 2012 Pearson Prentice.
Discussion of ”Should monetary policy lean against the wind? An analysis based on a DSGE model with banking” by Leonardo Gambacorta and Federico M. Signoretti.
Money and Banking Lecture 45. Review of the Previous Lecture Long-run Aggregate Supply Curve Equilibrium and Determination of Output and Inflation Impact.
NIS Economics The role of Kazakhstan’s government in the macro-economy; other policies and their application.
Policies to Fight the Risk of Deflation Jeffery Amato BIS 17 November 2003.
NS3040 The Austrian School of Macroeconomics Fall Term, 2014.
Trinity Workshop, Nov 7, Princeton Disclaimer: The views expressed here are my own and should not be interpreted as reflecting the views of Sveriges Riksbank.
MONETARY POLICY GOALS, STRATEGY AND TACTICS Unit 3 Lecture 3 – EC311 Susanto.
ECONOMICS Paul Krugman | Robin Wells with Margaret Ray and David Anderson SECOND EDITION in MODULES.
1 Liquidity: What do we know? Christian Upper Bank for International Settlements 1.
Monetary policy at ZLB/ELB – a BPEA tradition
The Conduct of Monetary Policy: Strategy and Tactics
The Conduct of Monetary Policy: Strategy and Tactics
Federal Reserve, Money supply and Inflation
Will the real Taylor Rule please stand up?
Inflation Targeting: A Canadian Perspective By Prof
NS3040 The Austrian School of Macroeconomics Summer Term, 2018
Presentation transcript:

Asset Price Bubbles and Monetary Policy: A Multivariate Extension By Andrew Filardo, BIS Prepared for a workshop on “Fundamental and Non-fundamental Asset Price Dynamics: Where Do We Stand?”, Venastul, Norway, February 2008

General Motivation Greenspan, Bubbles and Policy “In conclusion, the endeavors of policy makers to stabilize our economies require a functioning model of the way our economies work. Increasingly, it appears that this model needs to embody movements in equity premiums and the development of bubbles if it is to explain history.” Jackson Hole 2002

Key Contributions Of This Paper  Methodology – relatively simple macro setup and “realistic” multivariate bubble specification do work and yield key insights  Modelling – endogenous multivariate bubbles in a dynamic macro model  Monetary policy – conventional wisdom about ‘benign neglect and mopping-up later approach’ may be too optimistic in the current policy environment

Preview Of Findings  Multivariate bubble considerations complicate the policy tradeoffs:  It is optimal to respond to asset prices generally and bubbles specifically! Defensive strategies – preventing and pricking asset price bubbles Opportunistic strategies – use bubbles to achieve stabilization goals

Monetary Policy And Asset Prices  Asset price booms and busts have been extreme developments that monetary authorities have had to face.

Monetary Policy and Asset Prices Housing Equity Housing

Monetary Policy and Asset Prices: Asia-Pacific Equity Housing

Monetary Policy an Asset Prices  Asset price booms and busts are an important feature of the monetary policy landscape going forward. [Borio, English and Filardo (2003)]  The double-bubble aspect of this relationship has been underappreciated  Asset price booms and busts have been extreme developments that monetary authorities have had to face.

Road Map  Lay out monetary policy model  Multivariate bubble specification  Results  Policy implications and conclusions

The Greenspan Approach – Conventional Wisdom? “ …Greenspan’s preferred approach to bubbles is to let them burst of their own accord, and then to use monetary policy (and other instruments), as necessary, to protect the banking system and the economy from the fallout…the ‘mop-up after’ strategy “If the mopping up strategy worked this well after the mega-bubble burst in 2000, shouldn’t we assume that it will also work after other, presumably smaller, bubbles burst in the future?” Blinder & Reis, Jackson Hole 2006

Three Modelling Blocks Small-Scale Macro Model

Asset Price Block

Monetary Policy Block Standard Loss Function

Optimal Monetary Policy subject to the model of the macroeconomy and asset prices:

3 Policy Specifications

Modelling the Bubble Time-Varying Transition Probability (TVTP) Model For Each Bubble

Modelling the Bubble Time-Varying Transition Probability Model Sample Path of a Bubble - “Blowing Bubbles” Time periods

Modelling the Bubble No-Bubble State Transition Probability Function of y t-1

Modelling the Bubble Bubble State Transition Probability  2 specifications - weakly interacting multivariate bubbles - strongly interacting multivariate bubbles ‘Own’ duration dependence for strong version Housing bubble transition probability

Results for Optimal Policy Variance of inflation Variance of output Optimal Monetary Policy Frontiers

Results for Optimal Policy Variance of inflation Variance of output Optimal Monetary Policy Frontiers Superior policy

Results for Optimal Policy Variance of inflation Variance of output Optimal Monetary Policy Frontiers

Result for Standard Taylor Rule Optimal Policy Frontiers No response to AP

Basic Result I: Pricking AP Is Optimal Optimal Policy Frontiers No response to AP Response to AP

Basic Result 2: Knowing NF and F not critical Optimal Policy Frontiers No response to AP Response to AP Response to F and NF

A Little Bit of Nonlinearity, Important Consequences Bubble part

Complex Dynamics in Model Output

Nonlinear Impulse Responses Inflation

Nonlinear Impulse Responses Illustrate…  Endogenous bubble models admit richer dynamics  Chaotic behavior is possible  Monetary policy helps to stabilize the economy… … by not only pricking bubbles but also by exploiting bubbles (Blanchard, 2000)

Expected Durations  How do the expected durations of a bubble change over time? - Assume in the no-bubble steady state and a pickup in economic activity begins - In simulations, an 8-period positive shock to y

Expected Durations – Monetary Policy Matters!

Expected Duration for Housing Bubble

Start with an equity bubble (1995) Then a housing bubble begins (1999) Then recessionary shocks start (2000) & soon after the equity price bubble collapses Subpar growth shocks end (2002) Equity price bubble restarts (2003) Counterfactual simulation (?)

Expected Duration for Housing Bubble Recession ends at point D and optimal R increases! E bubble H bubble Recession

Expected Duration for Housing Bubble Too Low, Too Long Policy

Summary – So Far Optimal policy indicates central banks should respond to asset price bubbles on the way up as on the way down  in other words, no Greenspan benign neglect on the upside Also, double bubbles are a double whammy on Greenspan approach  don’t be too aggressive on the downside Consensus view a la Blinder/Reis not robust!

Extra Consideration – Closer to Reality: Incorporating Uncertainty Into Analysis Compare the expected gains and losses from reacting to asset prices – Risk Management!

Bayesian Expected Loss Analysis

Implications for Monetary Policy and Benign Neglect Threshold Degree of confidence in bubble matters!

Conclusions In this class of models, generally monetary authorities want to respond to asset prices; it also optimal to “prevent and prick them.” Findings about optimal monetary policy in multi- bubble environment: - Intuition from single-bubble models might be misleading at this policy juncture - Greenspan approach in may not be as attractive in 2008+

Conclusions What’s next on policy modelling front? - Forward-looking behavior (lengthening horizon!) - Uncertainty with small probability events (tail risk, insurance motives and ‘Greenspan/Bernanke put’) - Optimal policy mix especially at the ZLB

Conclusions What’s next on bubble modelling front? Better micro-foundations for financial imbalances and bubbles - What is the role of money and credit? - What is the nature of the coordination failure? - What is the role of rational herding and information cascades? Other behavioral models of asset prices?

So, here’s an alternative explanation for why the timing and size of the 75 basis point intermeeting cut in the federal funds rate target. Chairman Bernanke and his colleagues want us to know that when they see changes in the economy that compromise their medium-term stabilization objectives, they will act. January 23, ??? Where do we stand?... Now, In Disarray Investors expect the federal funds rate to be as low as 2.25% by the end of the year...In trying to prevent financial-market calamity, the (Bernanke) Fed may find itself pushed by Wall Street to leave interest rates too low for too long. The Economist, 31 January 2008

Thank you