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US Monetary Policy Group 5 Day 2 Chien-Hui Chan, Julian Yang, Yi-Hau Li.

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Presentation on theme: "US Monetary Policy Group 5 Day 2 Chien-Hui Chan, Julian Yang, Yi-Hau Li."— Presentation transcript:

1 US Monetary Policy Group 5 Day 2 Chien-Hui Chan, Julian Yang, Yi-Hau Li.

2 Monetary Policy  Monetary policy is the macroeconomic policy laid down by the central bank.  Monetary policy influence the availability and cost of money and credit to help promote national economic goals.  Monetary policy in the US is determined by the US Federal Reserve System (also called Federal Reserve or Fed).

3 Background  In late 2008, U.S. was facing the worst financial crisis and recession since the Great Depression.  Real GDP plummeted at an annual rate of 8.9%  The economy was in free fall  The unemployment rate was soaring  In response, the Fed cut the target federal funds rate essentially to zero (conventional monetary policy).  Given the economy’s dire straits during the recession, standard rules of thumb for monetary policy suggested that the funds rate should be cut to well below zero.

4 Unconventional Monetary Policy (1)  Forward policy guidance  A tool used by a central bank to exercise its power in monetary policy in order to influence, with their own forecasts, market expectations of future levels of interest rates. Long-term effect on financial conditions  In the August 2010, the Fed stated that it “anticipates that economic conditions…are likely to warrant exceptionally low levels for the federal funds rate at least through mid-2013.”

5 Unconventional Monetary Policy (2)  large-scale asset purchases (LSAP)  Quantitative easing (QE)  To Buy significant quantities of longer-term Treasury securities or mortgage-backed securities, then the supply of those securities available to the public falls. The prices of those securities rise and their yields decline.  To drive down a broad range of longer-term borrowing rate and boost economic activity  QE1 : 1.7 trillion (late 2008 and 2009)  QE2 : 600 billion (2010)  QE3 : 40 billion (2012)

6 The Effectiveness of Forward Guidance & LSAP(QE) Forward Guidance  FOMC’s statement language hints at where those short-term rates are likely to be in the future. That’s much more relevant information for households, businesses, and investors.  They are typically borrowing for expenditures such as cars, homes, or business capital spending, which are generally financed over a longer term.  The use of the policy statement to provide more explicit information about future policy took a quantum leap forward in the summer of 2011.  Since August 2011, the FOMC has extended forward guidance twice. In January 2012, the FOMC said it would keep the fed funds rate exceptionally low “at least through late 2014.”

7 The Effectiveness of Forward Guidance & LSAP(QE) LSAP(QE)  The goal of large-scale asset purchases, or LSAPs, is to drive down longer-term interest rates, and thereby boost economic growth.  The reason LSAPs work is that financial markets are not perfect. LSAPs drive down a broad range of longer-term borrowing rates. And lower rates get households and businesses to spend more than they otherwise would, boosting economic activity.  LSAPs can also affect interest rates by signaling that the central bank is determined to ease monetary conditions. LSAPs reinforce forward guidance, these two types of unconventional monetary policy as complementary.

8 GDP Growth Rate The Effectiveness of Forward Guidance & LSAP(QE)

9 Unemployment Rate The Effectiveness of Forward Guidance & LSAP(QE)

10 Stock Market The Effectiveness of Forward Guidance & LSAP(QE)

11  Forward policy guidance has proven to be effective at lowering expectations of future interest rates. Similarly, the evidence shows that LSAPs have been effective at improving financial conditions as well.  The estimated impact of a $600 billion LSAP program, such as QE2, is to lower the 10-year Treasury yield by between 0.15 and 0.20 percentage point. It is about how much the yield on 10-year Treasury securities typically responds to a cut in the fed funds rate of three- quarters to one percentage point.  We’re seeing signs of life in the housing market. Likewise, cheap auto financing rates have spurred car sales. And historically low corporate bond rates encourage businesses to start new projects and hire more workers

12 Risks and Uncertainty  Building up inflationary pressures.  Excessive risk-taking in financial markets.

13 What`s current effects?  Low inflation? Low inflation  Low velocity Low velocity  High Bubble High Bubble

14 Should USA continue QE policy?  Two signals for U.S. to decide whether to cease QE policy.  Inflation rate goes back to 2%  The unemployment rate is close to its natural rate (approx. 3%)  Bubbles come, should we put more money into the market?

15 Conclusion  U.S. should cease QE policy right now.  Velocity collapses  Inflation is low due to weak demand  US should focus on create no more bubbles.  Such as encourage energy resources exploration with high tech. (shale gas/oil development)

16 Velocity

17 Low Participant Rate

18

19 Thanks for your attentions!


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