Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byTracey McDonald Modified over 9 years ago
1
The Federal Reserve has a dual mandate to: Maintain stable prices (fight inflation/deflation) Maintain full employment (monetary policy to manage macroeconomic conditions)
2
Created: Jan 2008 by Jim Luke. The Fed manages Inter-bank Interest Rates and Regulates Banks…but does it control money supply?
3
Created: Jan 2008 by Jim Luke. Monetary Policy "Inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon in the sense that it is and can be produced only by a more rapid increase in the quantity of money than in output... A steady rate of monetary growth at a moderate level can provide a framework under which a country can have little inflation and much growth. It will not produce perfect stability; it will not produce heaven on earth; but it can make an important contribution to a stable economic society." --Milton Friedman The Bank [of Canada] gave it a college try, it really did. It just doesn't work that way. --John Crow, former governor of the Bank of Canada, on implementing Friedman's theories;
4
What Is Monetary Policy? Central bank (as representative of government) manipulation of the money supply, interest rates credit conditions with an objective of achieving macroeconomic goals.
5
Monetarist Theory History – The Classical School Strikes Back at Keynesianism
6
Three Theories of Monetary Policy Strict Monetarist Neo-classical/New Keynesian Modern Monetary Theory (MMT)
7
Created: Jan 2008 by Jim Luke. Equation of Exchange M x V = P x Y M: money supply V: Velocity (how fast money is spent) P: Price Level Y: Real Income Note: sometimes shown as M * V = P * Q same concept, different notation Identity: Must be true for any period of time
8
Both Monetarist and Neo-Classical/New Keynesian Theories: Trade-off between unemployment and inflation exists Controlling Inflation is higher priority 8/10/2015
9
Money supply concept: (Classical or Milton Friedman Monetarist version) Money supply is ‘exogenous’ more bank reserves —> more lending by banks –> increased money supply –> lower interest rates –> borrowing by consumers/firms –> more C and I spending –> faster GDP growth & inflation
10
Interest rates concept: (Neoclassical version) central bank open market purchases of bonds –> higher bond prices = lower interest rates –> more borrowing by consumers/firms –> more spending on C and I –> faster GDP growth –>
11
But, the Equation of Exchange M x V = P x Y M: money supply V: Velocity (how fast money is spent) P: Price Level Y: Real Income Note: sometimes shown as M V = P Q same concept, different notation Equation of Exchanges is an Identity : Must be true for any period of time after the fact..
12
Quantity theory of money (QTM): Based on equation of exchange with added assumptions about the behavior of variables. assume V is constant Conclusions: Money supply growth is solely responsible for determining Inflation
13
‘Crowding Out’ Theory Assumptions: Fixed amount of money in economy QTM holds true Theory: Gov borrowing takes $ away/raises interest rate for firm and household borrowers –> will reduce C and I unless Central Bank increases M to fund deficit inflation Absolutely not supported by evidence or data in modern real world.
14
Current Neoclassical and New Keynesian Views on monetary policy Support for ad hoc policy (policy makers should make it up as they go)
15
Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) Money growth (M1 – bank credit) is largely endogenous Key is base money growth, not M1 government deficits enable the private sector (firms and households) to grow and yet still accumulate net financial assets
16
MMT Foundation: Fiat money system with floating exchange rates eliminates government budget constraint Deficits effective in fighting unemployment no financing constraint on deficits deficits are limited by the availability of real, unemployed resources for the government to purchase Inflation threat is at/near full employment is reached (AD- LRAS model) 8/10/2015
17
Limitations of Monetary Policy: ‘Pushing on string’ Central bank cannot force banks to make loans
18
Limitations of Monetary Policy: Endogenous money supply Banks, not central bank really determine supply of money and credit
19
Limitations of Monetary Policy: Fiscal Policy Coordination Fiscal and Monetary policy could work at cross-purposes could expect ‘other’ to do it
20
Limitations of Monetary Policy: Liquidity trap At ‘zero lower bound’ when interest rates approach zero but the economy is still weak, monetary policy is largely ineffective.
21
Limitations of Monetary Policy: Globalization If interest rates too low or inflation too high, then value of currency drops –> capital inflow drops and M drops, even though X rises
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.