1 / 13

9. Monetary Rules

9. Monetary Rules. Friedman- rule : M.Friedman (1956), The quantity theory of money . A restatement . Studies in Quantitity Theory , Chicago Quantity Equation (e.g. Deutsche Bundesbank, Monatsbericht April 1999)

coby
Download Presentation

9. Monetary Rules

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 9. Monetary Rules Friedman-rule: M.Friedman (1956), The quantitytheoryofmoney. A restatement. Studies in QuantitityTheory, Chicago QuantityEquation (e.g. Deutsche Bundesbank, Monatsbericht April 1999) Taylor-Rule: John B. Taylor: Discretion versus policy rules in practice. In: Carnegie-Rochester Conference Series on Public Policy. Band 39, 1993, S. 195-214. U van Suntum, Lecture KuB 1 KuB

  2. Friedman´s rule(s) • 2%-rule: monetary support of growth in factor supply only => stable factor prices, commodity prices decline => „neutral money“ • 5%-Rule: monetary support of growth both in factor supply (2%) and productivity (3%): factor prices rise, commodity prices stable => „stable money“ U van Suntum, Lecture KuB 2 KuB

  3. Example (with v constant): • production function Yreal = a N productivity growth (3%) growth in factor supply (2%) • quantity equation: M v = Y = Yreal p => p = v M/(aN) • quantity equation: M v = Y = w N => w = v (M/N) • p = v M/(aN) => constant if M/(aN) is constant (5% rule) • w = v (M/N) => constant, if (M/N) is constant (2% rule) U van Suntum, Lecture KuB 3 KuB

  4. ECB follows idea of modified 5%-rule: • commodity prices: inflation rate near to, but below 2% • factor prices (wages): productivity growth plus inflation rate ECB-double pillar strategy • pillar: • Monetarygrowth • pillar: • Inflation targeting U van Suntum, Lecture KuB 4 KuB

  5. 1. pillar: monetary growth U van Suntum, Lecture KuB 5 KuB

  6. Upper bound: 5,5% = 2,5% - (-1,0%) + 2% Lower bound: 4,5% = 2,0% - (-0,5%) + 2% Target value: 4,5% U van Suntum, Lecture KuB 6 KuB

  7. 2. pillar: inflation targeting (multi-indicator concept) monetary forecast Instruments (interest rates) Inflation target (stable prices level) monetary indicators time U van Suntum, Lecture KuB 7 KuB

  8. Taylor-rule output-gap Long term Real interest rate current real GDP potential output Short term prime rate current inflation rate target inflations rate disturbance term inflation gap U van Suntum, Lecture KuB 8 KuB

  9. Interpretation of Taylor-Rule Empiricaldescriptionofcentralbankbehavior normative recommendationforcentralbankpolicy Taylor-rate i = real equilibrium interest rate + expected inflation rate + a * inflation gap + b * output gap i.e. rise in prime rate if inflation or real output are above standard value U van Suntum, Lecture KuB 9 KuB

  10. Taylor-rate and actual interest rate Source: Deutsche Bundesbank, Monatsbericht April 1999 U van Suntum, Lecture KuB 10 KuB

  11. Comparisonof Taylor ruleandquantityequation(see Bundesbank, Monatsbericht März 1999) (actual monetary increase) (target monetary increase) (i.e. interest rate increases if actual above target monetary increase) (* trend or target value U van Suntum, Lecture KuB 11 KuB

  12. Bundesbank: Taylor: • Differencesbetweenquantityequationand Taylor: • guidedbygrowthratesinsteadof absolute targetvalues • guidedbyinterest rate ofpreviousperiodinsteadoflongterm • equilibrium rate • explicit recognitionofchanges in velocityofmoneycirculation U van Suntum, Lecture KuB 12 KuB

  13. Lerning goals/questions • What is the monetary strategy of ECB? • Can you explain the Friedman rules (2% and 5%)? • Can you explain the Taylor rule? • What is the relationship between the Taylor rule and the quantity equation? U van Suntum, Lecture KuB 13 KuB

More Related