Top Banner
Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn Spring 2020 Lecture 23: Monetary Policy
46

Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...

Mar 12, 2022

Download

Documents

dariahiddleston
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...

Econ 702 Macroeconomics I

Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn

Spring 2020

Lecture 23: Monetary Policy

Page 2: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...

Outline

• Recap: Why we prefer monetary policy• Discuss formally monetary policy with Taylor rule imbedded New Keynesian model• Empirical estimation of real rate

Page 3: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...

Recap

Page 4: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...

Policy Exogeneity?

•In our expositions, we have treated fiscal policy and monetary policy as being conducted in a vacuum•That is, we treat government spending and money supply changes as exogenously determined•Let’s take a look at the real world conduct of monetary policy as summarized by the policy rate – in the US the Fed funds rate

Page 5: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...

We Move Interest Rates Instead of Money Supply to Hit Full Employment Output

By choosing M in order to make (27.10) hold

Page 6: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...

Fiscal or Monetary Preferred?

•Fiscal affects the natural rate•Monetary does not•Fiscal has long inside lag (proposal, legislation, implementation)•But monetary has a long outside lag (interest rates affect investment, consumption)

Page 7: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...

Example Why Monetary to Be Preferred

Keeping output constant by reducing G in face of positive IS shock results in r2,t < rf

1,t=> Changes composition of output at Y = Yf

Page 8: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...

Implementation: Taylor Rules (Taylor, 1993)

Textbook uses some standard assumptions

•r* (assumed) at 2.5%•π* at 2%•φπ = 1.5 •φy = 0.5

Page 9: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...
Page 10: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...

In Reality, Central Banks “Smooth”

•One can add an autoregressive feature, letting current policy rate depend on lagged policy rate in eqn (27.11)•This will produce a better fit to the actual data •Show this using Atlanta Fed Taylor Rule apphttps://www.frbatlanta.org/cqer/research/taylor-rule

Page 11: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...

• Alt 1: Eqn 27.11 except r* = 2%

• Alt 2:Eqn 27.11, but w/smoothing parameter = 0.85

• Alt 3: Eqn27.11, except r* estimated

Page 12: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...

• Alt 1: Eqn 27.11 except r* = 2%

• Alt 2:Eqn 27.11, but w/smoothing parameter = 0.85

• Alt 3: Eqn 27.11, except r* estimated

Notice that at certain points, during the Great Recession and 2015, implied rate under Alt 1 and Alt 3 was below 0%

Page 13: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...

Replacing LM with MP CurveAppendix E

Page 14: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...

Monetary Policy Rule Closer to Reality

Modifications:•Drop money supply, demand; money stock is now in background, and endogenous•Rewrite AD, AS curves in terms of π rather than P•Replace (27.11) with (E.1)

= 0

Page 15: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...

Monetary Policy Rule Closer to Reality

Modifications:•Drop money supply, demand; money stock is now in background, and endogenous•Rewrite AD, AS curves in terms of π rather than P•Replace (27.11) with (E.1)

= 0

Page 16: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...

Monetary Policy Rule Closer to Reality

Modifications:•Drop money supply, demand; money stock is now in background, and endogenous•Rewrite AD, AS curves in terms of π rather than P•Replace (27.11) with (E.1)

= 0

Page 17: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...

Monetary Policy Rule Closer to Reality

•e has interpretation as exogenous shift term, but in policy rule•Assume:

“Adaptive expectations”

Page 18: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...

Deriving MP Curve

Subtract expected inflation from both sides (where expected inflation next period is this period’s inflation, by adaptive expectations)

Page 19: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...

Deriving the MP Curve

Page 20: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...

The Real & Financial/Monetary Sides

IS curve

MP curve

AD curve

Page 21: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...
Page 22: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...
Page 23: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...
Page 24: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...

Note: this AD curve is slightly different from that in main textbook

Page 25: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...

Experiments

•IS shock•Reduction in r-bar (maybe r*↓)•Changes in weight on inflation gap, φπ

•Supply shocks

Page 26: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...
Page 27: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...
Page 28: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...
Page 29: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...

Supply Side and Entire Model

Subtract Pt-1 from both sides, use approximation when P=1

Where

Page 30: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...

Expectations Augmented Phillips Curve

The rest of the supply side is essentially the same as before.

Page 31: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...
Page 32: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...

Full Model

Adaptive expectations

MP curve insteadof LM curve

Expected inflation equals change in p-bar over lagged price

Page 33: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...
Page 34: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...
Page 35: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...

Experiments

•IS shock•Increase in r-bar •Supply shocks

Page 36: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...
Page 37: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...
Page 38: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...
Page 39: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...

The Natural Rate

Page 40: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...

Empirics of Natural Rate

Page 41: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...

New Keynesian Interpretation

Where consumption equals output, and

Hamilton, et al. (2015)

Page 42: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...

Natural Rate-Growth Link Is Weak over Long Term

Hamilton, et al. (2015)

Page 43: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...

Natural Rate-Growth Link Is Weak Cross-country

Hamilton, et al. (2015)

Page 44: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...

Holston-Laubach-Williams (JIE, 2017)

Page 45: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...

Ad Hoc Empirical Approach

Hamilton, et al. (2015)

Page 46: Econ 702 Macroeconomics I Charles Engel and Menzie Chinn ...

Summary

•The Natural Rate is key to implementing monetary policy•Theory (New Keynesian) implies a strong

relationship between natural rate and growth rateof potential output•The relationship is not robust in the data, either

over long spans or cross country•Most methods agree that that the natural rate has

fallen in recent years