Citizen Preferences over monetary & exchange rate policies & what governments might do about them INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT Course numbers STRT.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Fed and The Interest Rates
Advertisements

National Income and Price
International Finance
COMPARATIVE INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS: The Politics of International Finance James Raymond Vreeland School of Foreign Service Georgetown University 1.
International Political Economy
Chapter 1 Introduction to Macroeconomics
Measuring GDP and Economic Growth Chapter 1 Instructor: MELTEM INCE
The link between domestic savings, foreign savings, and domestic investment
Macroeconomics CHAPTER 6 Macroeconomics: The Big Picture PowerPoint® Slides by Can Erbil © 2005 Worth Publishers, all rights reserved.
The Domestic Sources of Foreign Economic Policies
MACROECONOMICS AND THE GLOBAL BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT Economics: Economic Review and Macro Basics.
The Russian Default of 1998 A case study of a currency crisis Francisco J. Campos, UMKC 10 November 2004.
Bretton Woods System.
Economics - Notes for Teachers
© 2003 McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited. International Dimensions of Monetary and Fiscal Policy Chapter 17.
Economics 282 University of Alberta
Copyright © 2001 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Slide Exchange Rates and the Open Economy.
Economics – A Course Companion Blink & Dorton, P
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 10 Understanding Foreign Exchange.
Macroeconomic Policy and Floating Exchange Rates
The pros, the cons and a little background on the creation of the euro
Exchange Rate Regimes. Fixed Exchange Rates and the Adjustment of the Real Exchange Rate In the medium run, the economy reaches the same real exchange.
International Money and Finance. L ECTURE O UTLINE  THEORY OF INTERNATIONAL FINANCE  Foreign Exchange Rates  HISTORY OF INTERNATIONAL MONETARY AND.
1 Chapter 9 part 2 International Finance These slides supplement the textbook, but should not replace reading the textbook.
Chapter 1 Why Study Money, Banking, and Financial Markets?
READING ASSIGNMENT: Oatley – Chapter 13
Stakeholder Objectives
The Gold Standard The gold standard was a commitment by participating countries to fix the prices of their domestic currencies in terms of a specified.
Macro Chapter 10 Dynamic Change, Economic Fluctuations, and the AD-AS Model.
BALANCE OF PAYMENTS PROBLEMS. Current Account Deficit Current Account Deficit= net outflows on current account greater than net inflows. Made up on the.
1 Ch. 14: Money, Interest Rates, and Exchange Rates.
Fixed and Floating Exchange Rates
GLOBAL ECONOMIC RELATIONS Course number DEVM 566, May 14 – May 25, 2012 James Raymond Vreeland School of Foreign Service & The Department of Government.
Monetary and Exchange-Rate Policies
International Trade. Balance of Payments The Balance of Payments is a record of a country’s transactions with the rest of the world. The B of P consists.
© 2007 Thomson South-Western. In this section, look for the answers to these questions: Why does productivity matter for living standards? What determines.
1 Groups of countries to know for the mid-term: “G5” – top shareholders of the IMF/World Bank United States, Japan, Germany, France, United Kingdom G20.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 19 Exchange Rate Policy and the Central Bank.
Week 6 The Domestic Sources of Foreign Economic Policies.
Distinguished Lecture on Economics in Government Exchange rate Regimes: is the Bipolar View Correct? Stanley Fischer Ahmad Bash P13-18.
Chapter 1 Why Study Money, Banking, and Financial Markets?
Investments & Democracy Democracy & Investments READING ASSIGNMENT: Jensen, Nathan M Democratic Governance and Multinational Corporations: Political.
1 International Finance Chapter 19 The International Monetary System Under Fixed Exchange rates.
Macro Chapter 10 Dynamic Change, Economic Fluctuations, and the AD-AS Model.
A Society-Centered Approach to Monetary and Exchange-Rate Policies READING ASSIGNMENT: Oatley – Chapter 12 1.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved Preview What is money? Control of the supply of money The demand for money A model of.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 21: Exchange Rates, International Trade, and Capital.
1 Overview of Comparative Economics Chapter I How do we compare economies?
Chapter 12 International Linkages Introduction National economies are becoming more closely interrelated Economic influences from abroad have effects.
NS3040 Winter Term 2014 Issues With Bretton Woods II.
1 International Finance Chapter 4 Exchange Rates II: The Asset Approach in the Short Run.
1 International Macroeconomics Chapter 8 International Monetary System Fixed vs. Floating.
26-1 Economics: Theory Through Applications This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported.
KOREA University International Summer Campus: INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION (ISC 335) James Raymond Vreeland (Georgetown University)
Exchange Rates, Business Cycles, and Macroeconomic Policy in the Open Economy: Fixed Exchange Rates Prof Mike Kennedy.
The International Financial System Chapter 13 © 2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning.
© 2014 by McGraw-Hill Education. This is proprietary material solely for authorized instructor use. Not authorized for sale or distribution in any manner.
Eco 200 – Principles of Macroeconomics Chapter 15: Macroeconomic Policy.
Macro Chapter 10 Dynamic Change, Economic Fluctuations, and the AD-AS Model.
Chapter 1 Why Study Money, Banking, and Financial Markets?
Macro Review Day 5. International Trade Policy, Comparative Advantage, and Outsourcing 9 Balance of Trade Trade deficit = exports < imports Trade surplus.
For more course tutorials visit ECO 203 Entire Course (Ash Course) ECO 203 Week 1 DQ 1 Economics Systems ECO 203 Week 1 DQ 2 Role of.
Monetary Policy Ch. 15 What’s the relationship between money supply, interest rates, and aggregate demand? How can the Fed use its control of the money.
Chapter 16 What Should Central Banks Do? Monetary Policy Goals, Strategy, and Targets.
The IMF Part 1: History and Background
BoP Deficits & Surplus.
Module Exchange Rate Policy
Exchange Rates and Macroeconomic Policy
NS3040 Summer Term 2018 Issues With Bretton Woods II
Exchange Rate Policy 02/28/17 AP Macro Mr. Warner.
Presentation transcript:

Citizen Preferences over monetary & exchange rate policies & what governments might do about them INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT Course numbers STRT & -45, Spring 2010, Mod 4 James Raymond Vreeland, School of Foreign Service Week 6 (Wednesday, 21 April; Monday, 26 April)

Plan for tonight: 1.Quick review 2.Discuss projects 3.Citizen preferences over monetary & XR politics Electoral models Partisan models Sectoral models 4.What to do? Central bank independence Other “commitment mechanisms” Domestic: veto players International: FTAs (with investment chapters) & BITs (Bilateral Investment Treaties) 5.The stability of democracy

Review/summary slides

Factors, Sectors, & Institutions Trade is “efficient” But there are winners & losers –Globalization winners – factor model: Abundant factor –Globalization losers – factor model: Scarce factor –Globalization winners – sector model: Export-oriented sector –Globalization losers – sector model: Import-competing sector Political institutions may influence how we deal with losers –E.g., Domestic political institutions like democracy v. dictatorship Import-Substitution Industrialization Export-oriented industrialization International Institution – the IMF – can help break gridlock

The Trilemma: Why would you want… Free Capital Flow? –Draw on the savings of the rest of the world –Investment opportunities abroad Fixed Exchange Rate? –Reduce uncertainty in trade Sovereign Monetary Policy? –Address inflation/unemployment

Stylized history of the international monetary system Late 19 th century: –Mobile capital, fixed XR, authoritarian governments Interwar years: –Mobile capital + fixed XR + democracy  collapse! –beggar-thy-neighbor policies (tariffs, competitive devaluations) Bretton Woods ( /3): 1.Some XR flexibility (fixed-but-adjustable “snake”) 2.Capital controls 3.A stabilization fund (held on reserve at the IMF) 4.The International Monetary Fund – authority over XR changes + conditionality attached to loans Post Bretton Woods: –The major economies: Democracy + Floating exchange rates Current system contradiction: –The 2 major economies (the US, a debtor & China, a creditor) have incongruent solutions to the “trilemma”: Floating XR + open capital flows + independent* monetary policy Fixed XR + capital controls + independent* monetary policy –If the US solution to current account deficits is a floating XR, & China fixes to the dollar, there’s no way out, and the system is long-run unsustainable

End of review/summary slides

Society-based models of monetary & XR politics 1.Electoral models 2.Partisan models 3.Sectoral models

Free Capital Flow Fixed Exchange RateSovereign Monetary Policy Inconsistent/Unholy Trinity Or “Trilemma”: a country can only have 2 out of 3 of these

Assuming free capital flows… Governments must choose between –monetary policy autonomy –XR stability

1. Electoral models Predict floating XR  monetary autonomy used to manipulate political-business cycles If there is a fixed XR  commitment may not be credible before elections (elections like the Sirens!) Pocketbook voter model – people vote according to changes in their income – Sociotropic model – voters consider macro performance (economic growth, unemployment, inflation)

Of course, for the US don’t forget the electoral college institution!

The update…check it out: hibbs.com/Election2008/2008Elec tion-MainPage.htm

Political-business cycles (PBC)? Governments may be less willing to accept monetary policy constraints before an election Problem 1: empirical – debate over whether we really observe PBCs Problem 2: theoretical – if voters are rational, they shouldn’t be fooled by a PBC (short-run employment eaten up by eventual inflation) Kaplan: Lately in Latin America, we see COUNTER- PBCs! –International explanation: lack of international finance since Latin American Debt Crisis –Domestic explanation: Hyper-inflation history makes voters “inflation-averse”

2. Partisan models Left-wing parties are “pro-employment” –Tied to organized labor Right-wing parties are “anti-inflation” –Tied to business interests Prediction: –Right-wing governments more likely than left-wing governments to establish & maintain a fixed XR It is possible to connect this to the electoral model: –Voters choose left-wing parties during recessions & right-wing parties under inflation

Downs offers a “spatial” model of party competition. Based on Hotelling’s (1929) model –Where should PUMA locate if people shop at stores closest to their house? NIKEPUMA Employment concerns Inflation concerns Vote single-peaked preferences In a 2-party system, where will the left & right parties locate? Dems 민주당 Reps 한나라당 What happens when somebody decides not to vote? Median preference shifts away from the absent voter

Final thought on “partisan” models As we move into “sectoral models,” Consider that in the “partisan” model, we have –Left – labor-oriented – parties –VS –Right – business oriented – parties In the trade models, what does a model based on labor & owners of capital recall? FACTOR MODEL So, you can think of the partisan models as analogous to factor models

3. Sectoral models Interest groups have different preferences on the trade-off between domestic –economic autonomy & XR stability Some groups prefer XR stability Others domestic economic autonomy In this model, the interest groups are sector-based

NIKEPUMA Domestic economic autonomy XR stability By the way, the median voter model does not have nice clean results in multiple dimensions…   

Domestic economic autonomy XR stability Weak currency Strong currency

Four domestic interest groups 1.Export-oriented producers 2.Import-competing producers 3.Nontraded-goods producers 4.Financial services industry

Fixed or Float / Strong or Weak? Export-oriented producers prefer… –Fixed XR: stability for their international transactions –Weak XR: keeps the price of their products world markets low (keeps demand high) Import-competing producers prefer… –Floating XR: prefers monetary policy to address recessions/inflation –Weak XR: keeps the price of imports high! This spurs domestic demand Nontraded-goods producers prefer… –Floating XR: prefers monetary policy to address recessions/inflation –Strong XR: consume more traded goods, travel more, pay for tuition

Fixed or Float / Strong or Weak? Financial services industry prefer… –XR stability leads to more international transactions… –But XR volatility leads to XR-risk business… –And monetary autonomy helps maintain a stable domestic banking system, low inflation, and more stable interest rates –So: A weak preference for Floating XR –As for currency strength: buy foreign assets when XR is strong, repatriate returns when the XR is weak –So: No preference on XR strength

Sectoral XR preferences summary XR stability preference High/fixed low/float/ monetary autonomy XR strength preference Strong currency Nontradable Weak currency Export-orientedImport-competing Financial services ??? Exporters in other countries – keep them out of our elections! Imperialist colonial powers? Get them out of our countries!

BREAK

돈 주지 마 ! It’s all about commitment Insulate policy-makers from short-term political pressures Time 1: beginning of your term in office Time 2: right before elections Option A: sound monetary policy Option B: drop interest rates Time 1: U(A2)>U(B2) Time 2: U(A2)<U(B2) The “sirens”: electoral pressures The commitment: Independent central banks ( 돈 주지 마 )

First – the “sirens” policy mechanism: Monetary & Unemployment Assume a “natural rate of unemployment” –New entrants, labor unions, minimum wages, hiring & firing practices, unemployment compensation… (raise the wage, lower the demand for labor) Workers care about their REAL wage (purchasing power), but paid a NOMINAL wage An unanticipated reduction of the interest rate  unexpected increase in inflation  lower REAL wage  reduce unemployment An unanticipated increase of the interest rate  unexpected decrease in inflation  increase REAL wage  increase unemployment In the long-run, labor market adjusts and changes are reversed  return to the “natural rate of unemployment”

But is there a cost???... If a government continually uses monetary policy to keep unemployment below the natural rate, it must continually increase the rate of inflation (accelerationist principle)

What is the real cost? Inflation raises uncertainty among firms & unions This uncertainty can *reduce* investment & *economic growth* This, in turn, raises the natural rate of unemployment So, we “commit” to low inflation with independent central banks

Commitment mechanisms Central bank independence measured: 1.CB’s freedom to decide economic objectives –Inflation v. unemployment 2.CB’s freedom to decide how to set monetary policy 3.Whether CB decisions can be reversed by other branches of the government Examples: –Swiss National Bank – highly independent No provision whatsoever for the government to influence monetary policy –Reserve Bank of Australia – highly subordinate Secretary of the Treasure has final authority over monetary- policy decisions & must approve any interest-rate changes proposed by the Reserve Bank

Time-inconsistent preference problem Exams force students to study – solves their time-consistent preference problem But the prof has a time-consistency problem too! The day of the exam, my optimal strategy is to cancel the exam –I can use my time for other things –Students are also better off – they did their studying, but are spared the exam-anxiety But if I cancelled all my exams, my reputation would suffer Imagine you had heard that I often cancel my mid-term, would you have studied? Then the exam would not have worked to solve your time- consistency problem So my campus reputation encourages me to be credible Adjunct problem? A one-shot game! Forget grades! Institutions to force me to give you a final exam? –Past summer: KU wouldn’t pay me! –My commitment is credible after all… so keep studying

The generic problem of time- inconsistent preferences: Individual’s preferences over time: Time 1: U(A)>U(B) Time 2: U(B)>U(A) Anticipating the change in preferences, can the individual Time 1 to choosing State Time 2?

Examples: Classic: Ulysses & the Sirens Time 1=Before listening to the Sirens. Time 2=While listening to the Sirens. State A=Sailing home… State B=Belly of the beast…

Principal=student. Delegates to agent=professor. Time 1: Beginning of the semester. Time 2: Any Thursday night. State A: State of knowledge. State B: State of… (Toads). Education:

Hostages would like to commit to not pressing charges. H Promise Not K Free Kill H Testify Not (–,1) (0,2) (T,-10 years) Time 1 Time 2

Under democracy: Time 1: Voter elects a government that offers incentives to firms to invest. Time 2: Voter elects a government to tax the firm (expropriate the benefits from investment).

G Offer Not F Invest Not G Expropriate Not (0,0)(0,S)(1,1) (T,0) Time 1Time 2 Suppose that T>1>S>0

Note that this can happen under dictatorship too. A new dictatorship can come to power E.g., a market-friendly dictatorship can be replaced by a socialist dictatorship Or the old dictatorship can simply change its mind! But if the dictatorship can guarantee that he will be around a long time, His long-run interest REPUTATION may help solve the time-inconsistent preference problem! Is dictatorship more or less fickle than democracy? Why would we think a dictator will be around a long time?

More examples for Time-inconsistent preference problem…

Another government example: Principal: Government. Agent: Central bank. If the central bank is not independent of the government, it may be subject to pressures to lower interest rates before elections…leading to inflation and long-run economic problems. Is this is a particular problem in the run up to contested elections?

The problem of time-inconsistent preferences pervades many political, economic, and other relationships. This is an analytical tool that can be applied well outside of the study of political science.

Marriage: Not needed if there is “true love” or “happily ever after.” Needed because we anticipate the possibility of “Time 2.” Time 2: U(B)>U(A) State A=Together State B=Sirens, Toads, etc… “Richer,” “health,” & “better” added for symmetry. “Poorer,” “sicker,” “worse” are the kickers.

Suggested readings Elster, Jon Ulysses and the Sirens: Studies in Rationality and Irrationality. New York: Cambridge University Press. Elster, Jon Ulysses Unbound. New York: Cambridge University Press.

Other commitment mechanisms?

International commitment mechanisms?

We find a very weak relationship between BITs and FDI. Further, we find that rather than encouraging greater FDI in riskier environments, BITs only have a positive effect on FDI flows in countries with an already stable business environment. Overall, BITs seem to have little positive effect either on foreign investment or on outside investors' perception of the investment environment in low- and middle-income countries.

What role do DOMESTIC institutions play? Tsebelis, George “Decision Making in Political Systems.” British Journal of Political Science 25:

The median voter may prefer a high degree of redistribution. If so, “the rich” may actually be willing to risk the struggle for dictatorship than to comply with the results of democratic elections. Subvert democracy? (E.g. Aristide in Haiti overthrown by Cedras.)

What kinds of democratic institutions promote policy stability? What institutions promote policy change? (Agnostic on normative issues.)

Tsebelis points out that debates about the effects of institutions are usually conducted in pairs: Federalist versus Centralized Parliamentary versus Presidential 2 party versus Multi party Bicameral legislature versus Unicameral

Consider the usefulness when comparing 2 political systems: Unicameral, presidential, 3 party with coalition government. Bicameral, parliamentary, 2 party system. The cause of differences between these 2 systems (growth, policy change, inequality) is not “identified.” Is it due to legislative structure, regime, or party structure?

We can conceive of these differences as differences along a single dimension: The number of “veto players.”

What is a “veto player”? Individual or collective actors whose agreement (by majority rule for collective actors) is required for a change of the status quo.

It may be misleading to examine institutional features in isolation. Tsebelis offers a consistent framework for comparing across regimes, legislature types, and party systems.

Consider US, UK, & Italy. Culturalists group US & UK together as different from Italy (Anglo Saxon v. Latin). Party theorists also group US & UK together (2 party v. multiparty). But parliamentary theorists group UK & Italy as different from the US. Who would group US and Italy together?

ItalyUKUS # partiesMulti2 party RegimeParl Pres CultureLatinAngloSaxo n

But on the veto player dimension: UK: Almost always 1. US: Up to 3. Italy: Usually about 4. US and Italy are predicted to be more similar with respect to policy stability than UK.

How does the # of veto players affect policy stability? By definition of “veto player,” unanimity between such players is required for policy change.

Straightforward predictions: Increasing veto players increases policy stability.

The connection between income & democracy

One of the strongest correlates of democracy: –PER CAPITA INCOME (economic development)… Why? –Democracy causes development? Mixed evidence (seems to change every decade) –Spurious? Maybe… yet there does seem to be a causal connection –Development causes democracy to EMERGE? Evidence is weak –Development causes democracy to SURVIVE! One of the strongest findings in comparative politics Political risk

Think DYNAMICALLY Don’t just look at correlations Consider –Onset –Continuation In this article we consider onset/emergence –In other work, Pevehouse addresses continuation/survival

Take-homes 1.Economic performance  survival in office! 2.Still there are cleavages in society: 1.Preferences over inflation v. employment (monetary policy) 2.Fixed v. floating XR 3.Over-/under-valued XR 3.Political business cycles appear to hurt in the long-run 4.Insulate monetary policy from elections? 1.Central bank independence 2.International commitments 3.Domestic veto players 5.Democracies survive at high incomes

Thank you WE ARE GLOBAL GEORGETOWN!