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LECTURE 8 Stabilization policy. Øystein Børsum 7 th March 2006. Overview of forthcoming lectures. Lecture 8: Stabilization policies Goals for stabilization policies: Stable output and inflation Optimal policy rule: Demand and supply shocks Lecture 9: Limits to stabilization policies
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LECTURE 8Stabilization policy Øystein Børsum 7th March 2006
Overview of forthcoming lectures • Lecture 8: Stabilization policies • Goals for stabilization policies: Stable output and inflation • Optimal policy rule: Demand and supply shocks • Lecture 9: Limits to stabilization policies • Rational expectations and the Policy Ineffectiveness Proposition, the Ricardian Equivalence Theorem and the Lucas Critique • Policy rules versus discretion: Credibility of economic policy • Real business cycles (section 19.4) • Lecture 10: Open economy • Features of a small, open economy with perfect capital mobility • Aggregate demand and aggregate supply in the open economy • Long-term macroeconomic equilibrium in the open economy
Overview of stabilization policy in the AS-AD model with a Taylor rule • Stable output and stable inflation are popular policy goals • In the case of demand shocks, the adequate policy response with respect to output and inflation stabilization is the same • In the case of supply shocks, there is a clear trade-off between the two goals • The priorities of monetary policy are represented by the choice of parameters in the Taylor rule • The optimal policy rule depends on whether supply or demand shocks are dominant, as well as policy preferences • Within a framework of rules-based policies, activist fiscal policy and monetary policy are essentially the same: Demand management Therefore, they lead to the same outcomes and have the same limitations
Presumption: A desire for stabilization policies • Hypothesis: The observed aversion to fluctuations in output and inflation can be represented by a social loss function:
Motivating output stability as a policy goal • Consumers prefer to smooth consumption over time, but may not be able to do so: Credit constraints, insurance market imperfections • High consumer risk aversion? • Stable income (output) may help consumers to smooth consumption • Labor market inefficiencies probably increase when employment fluctuates • Uneven distribution of the cost of recession (low-paid, unskilled and young workers suffer most): Successful stabilization policy may help to improve the distribution of income and welfare
Motivating stable inflation as a policy goal • Surprisingly hard to motivate in theory… • A fluctuating rate of inflation generates: • Inflation forecast errors: Households will regret saving, investment and labor supply decisions • Arbitrary redistribution of real income and wealth between creditors and debtors • Protection against unanticipated inflation: Indexation of nominal contracts • Indexation is rare in real life, probably because the contracting parties (e.g., employers and employees) focus on different price indices
The inflation target should be low and positive • Costs of a fully anticipated inflation • ”Shoe-leather costs” • ”Menu costs” • Distortion of relative prices (due to unsynchronized price setting) • Tax distortions (due to a non-indexed tax system) • The case for a positive target inflation rate: • Lower bound on the nominal interest rate (“liquidity trap”) • Downwards nominal wage and price rigidity • Quality improvements of goods and services are not fully captured by official price indices • Most OECD countries aim at ”Low and stable inflation” with a target rate of 2 – 2½ %
Policy based on rules vs. discretionary policy • Examples of policy rules: • The Taylor rule (flexible inflation targeting) • A fixed exchange rate policy • The Friedman rule (constant money growth) • Discretionary policy: Policy makers react in an ad-hoc manner to the specific circumstances of the situation, using all relevant available information • Trade-off: Credibility vs. flexibility • Credibility anchors inflation expectations: The legacy of “stabilization” policies in the 70s and 80s
with with AS-AD model (restated)
Policy problem: Find the monetary policy that minimizes the social loss function • At first, we disregard fiscal policy: • AD curve: • AS curve: • Social loss function: • Decision variables (in the Taylor rule): h and b
Deriving the variances of output and inflation in the general case • Demand shock variable z (see chapter 17): • The asymptotic (long-run) variances of output and inflation become (see appendix chapter 20):
Case 1: An economy with only demand shocks • Only demand shocks: • The variances of output and inflation simplify • Higher values of h and b reduce both variances: No trade-off between the inflation gap and the output gap
Higher weight on the output stabilization (higher b) reduces both the output gap and the inflation gap Illustration of the short-run effects of a negative demand shock under different weights on the monetary policy parameter b
Conclusion: No policy trade-off in an economy with only demand shocks • The central bank should react to demand shocks by pursuing a countercyclical monetary policy (b > 0). • There is no trade-off between stabilizing output and stabilizing inflation when business cycles are driven by demand shocks. • When faced with demand shocks, the central bank should react as strongly as possible to the output and inflation gaps.
Case 2: An economy with only supply shocks • Only supply shocks: • The variances of output and inflation simplify • A low variance of output can only be achieved at the expense of a high variance of inflation, and vice versa: A clear trade-off between the inflation gap and the output gap where
With supply shocks, there is a clear trade-off between the inflation gap and the output gap Illustration of the short-run effects of a negative supply shock under different designs of monetary policy
Conclusion: Clear policy trade-off in an economy with only supply shocks • If policy makers primarily seek to stabilize output, b should be positive and high (countercyclical policy) and h should be close to zero so that the AD curve becomes steep. • If policy makers primarily seek to stabilize inflation, b should be negative (procyclical policy) and h should be high so that the AD curve becomes flat.
The general case: In optimum, there is a trade-off between the output gap and the inflation gap • Minimize the social loss function: • First-order conditions with respect to h and b: • Implications: In a social optimum, a smaller variance of output can only be achieved at the expense of a larger variance of inflation, and vice versa
Optimal monetary policy design depends on which shocks are dominant and the policy preferences Optimal monetary policy under the Taylor rule
Rules-based fiscal stabilization policy work in the same way as rules-based monetary policy • Fiscal policy rule: • Monetary policy follows the Taylor rule • The AD curve with activist fiscal policy:
Decreased interest in fiscal stabilization policy • Policy lags are seen to disadvantage fiscal policy relative to monetary policy • Recognition lag (data measurement) • Decisions lag (political system) • Implementation lag (administrative process) • Effectiveness lag (from change in instrument to effect in target) • Direct constraints on the room for fiscal policy • EU: Maastricht treaty (1992) and the Stability and Growth Pact (1997) • Credibility problems (cf. lecture 10) are likely to be more pronounced for fiscal than for monetary policy