1.8.2 Monetary Policy Flashcards

1
Q

What is monetary policy?

A
  • Use of interest rates, supply of money and credit and exchange rates to influence AD and control inflation
  • Inflation target in UK is 2% +-1
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2
Q

What determines money supply?

A
  • Strength of £ determined by demand and supply in forex markets
  • MPC sets base rate - high street banks can set own interest rates
  • Notes and coins - very small sum
  • Most stores in banks electronically
  • Banks make loans create electronic money
  • For every £ spent in a bank another £10 is lent out to borrowers
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3
Q

What is expansionary/contractionary monetary policy?

A

Expansionary:

  • Fall in interest
  • Expand supply of credit
  • Depreciate value of exchange rate
  • Leads to rise in AD and LRAS

Deflationary:

  • Higher interest rates
  • Tighten credit
  • Appreciation of exchange rate
  • Decrease in AD
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4
Q

What are interest rates?

A

The Bank of England MPC sets the base rate of interest. This is the cost of borrowing and then return of saving - this is the interest rate for banks and then banks are able to supply their own interest rates - often smaller than interest borrowers face.

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5
Q

How does a change in interest affect borrowing?

A
  1. Change in market interest rates - feeds to borrowing and saving
  2. Impact on demand - effect on spending, saving, investment and exports as well as confidence and exchange rates - change in domestic and external demand
  3. Total domestic demand, exchange rates influence import prices, effect on output jobs and investment
  4. Real GDP and rates of inflation change
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6
Q

What is the process of interest rates rising?

A
  1. Market rates rise, mortgages and loans more expensive
    - Assets fall in value
    - More saving less spending and investment
    - £ stronger against other currencies
  2. Borrowers spend more to pay off debt, less disposable income
    - Savers save more and spend less due to interest
    - Demand falls
    - Strong pound makes imported goods cheaper, rising deficit
  3. Lower demand causes fall in prices of disinflation, production may increase due to lower costs
    - Exports more expensive overseas
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7
Q

What is the process of interest rates falling?

A
  1. Market rates fall, mortgages and loans are cheaper so more disposable incomes
    - Assets like houses rise in value as more want to buy
    - Less saving so more borrowing and investment
    - £ weaker as less attractive
    - Consumer confidence increases
  2. Borrow more money as spending less on loans
    - Savers choose to save less and spend more, mpc rises
    - Imports rise in price
    - Higher demand in the economy
    - More investment in the economy
  3. Higher demand causes prices to rise
    - Inflation rates rise
    - Exports cheaper so increased exports
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8
Q

What is the role of a central bank?

A
  • Monetary policy - setting interest, QE and exchange rate intervention
  • Financial stability and regulation - policies designed to maintain financial stability of banks and other lenders
  • Policy operation function - lender of last resort to commercial banking systems, manage liquidity levels in commercial banks
  • Financial infrastructure - oversee payments used by banks
  • Debt managements - handle government debt
  • Issuing notes and coins
  • Inflation targeting
  • Banker to government and commercial banks
  • Manage exchange rates
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9
Q

What is the role of the MPC in the UK?

A

Body within the BofE responsible for monetary policy and the inflation target
-Use the bank rate which commercial banks use and calculate the interest to charge borrowers. Then influences market rates, asset prices, confidence and exchange rates to change AD

  • Thorough assessment of the economy each month looking at demand and supply side indicators
  • Interest rate decision looked at after this
  • Looks at strength of inflationary pressures and forecast
  • Lots of uncertainty
  • Affects demand and the supply side of the economy
  • Operates free floating currency
  • 2% inflation target
  • Quantitative easing - £445 billion
  • Capital and liquidity requirements for banks
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10
Q

What factors are considered when setting interest?

A
  • GDP growth
  • Spare capacity
  • bank lending
  • Equity markets (share prices)
  • Confidence
  • Growth of wages, earnings, productivity and unit labour costs
  • Unemployment and employment data
  • Trends in forex markets
  • International data - e.g. GDP growth rates in economies of major trading partners
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11
Q

What is quantitative easing?

A

-Creates new money electronically into the national money supply used to buy government bonds or other financial assets to inject money into the economy and stimulate growth.

The MPC QE programme is £445bn of assets - mostly government bonds

  • Main aim is to increase liquidity of financial institutions making it easier for them to lend.
  • First introduced after 2008 to encourage lending which had stopped during the credit crunch - difficult to borrow to boost AD
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12
Q

What is a bond?

A

A bond is a method used by governments to borrow. They create an IOU which they then sell in return for cash - they promise to repay the bond at some agreed point in the future. Bonds can be bought and sold.

They are loans given to an institution issued by the government for the government to borrow. They have a fixed term and pay an annual return during the time when trading on bond markets. Demand may rise when interest rates are low or there is QE. Demand may fall when new bonds are sold offering higher coupon values

The interest rate on the bond is known as its yield which governments have to pay

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13
Q

What is the effect of Quantitative Easing?

A
  • Wealth effect - rising demand for bonds leads to higher share and bond prices
  • Borrowing cost effect - QE lowers interest rate on long term debt such as government bonds and mortgages making it cheaper for the government to borrow and invest

Lending effect - QE increases liquidity of banks and increased lending lifts incomes and spending in the economy

Currency effect - lower interest rates have the side effect of causing exchange rate to weaken which helps exports

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14
Q

What is the process of QE?

A
  • New money electronically added
  • Buys financial assets mainly bonds
  • More demand leads to higher prices for assets e.g. bond prices - rise in price of bonds leads to lower yield percentage on government bonds
  • Effect of QE causes fall in long term interest rates e.g. mortgages and corporate bonds
  • Lower interest rates and increased cash in the banking system should then stimulate AD through a rise in consumption and investment
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15
Q

What is the impact of appreciation/depreciation of a currency?

A

Appreciation: SPICED

Depreciation: less demand for imports, more for exports

  • Outward shift of AS as imports cheaper. This leads to:
  • Cost pull inflation and energy and food bills higher
  • Exports cheaper overseas reducing deficit and rising export sales + real GDP and jobs
  • Rise in exports and fall in imports increase AD - export profits stimulus to labour market
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16
Q

What were the effects and responses to the Great Depression?

A

Effects:

  • Unemployment
  • Deflation
  • Reduced output from Wall Street Crash due to falter in stock market confidence in 1929

Response:

  • Initially raised taxes and cut spending and public sector wages, leading to further unemployment and recession.
  • UK left gold standard and used expansionary monetary policy - he ended laissez-faire policies and increased government funded jobs and infrastructure projects
  • In 1936 Keynes demonstrated intervention was needed and sticky wages meant laissez faire would not work.
17
Q

What were the causes/effects of the Global Financial Crisis?

A

-Loss of confidence from mass of bad debts due to lending to risk home buyers with low incomes, turned to debt and pushed home loan firms and major banks into debt and bankruptcy

  • Financial innovation - credit default swaps and debt obligations
  • Asset price bubble - lend out too much
  • Regulatory capture - failure of credit rating agencies
  • Information failure - buyers of debt did not understand risks as packaged loans knew they were bad debts which could not be paid off
  • Speculation - securitization created markets - firms bet on markets and so banks stopped lending but instead speculated on stocks and shares to make money, creating an unstable market
  • Externalities - one big bank created risk of contagion
  • Moral hazard - banks seen too big to fail as governments will always save it as too important even if they unemployed people and regulation grew
  • Monopolies - collusion market rigging - markets dominated by few major and older banks so potential for collusion to rise up interest rates for interbank borrowing and lending
18
Q

What were the responses to the GFC?

A
  • Bank bailouts to try preserve the system
  • Bank rate reduced from 5% to 0.5%
  • Quantitative easing
  • VAT reduced from 17.5% to 15%
  • Interest at historic lows
  • Fiscal stimulus for a while
  • bailout of the private sector

Failures:

  • Money failed to arrive at expected rates due to growth of public debt - led to austerity programmes - spending cuts and cut in public sector wages
  • Debts made banks nervous to lend, lead to credit crunch
19
Q

What are the roles of the BofE

A
  • Issue and control money supply
  • Price and valuation - 2% inflation
  • Control spending
  • Financial system
  • Interbank lending
  • Keeping confidence
20
Q

Summarise monetary policy

A
  • Changing interest and money supply
  • QE
  • Cutting interest reduces cost of mortgages and credit so more consumption and investment. QE also increases money supply so has same effect

Objectives:

  • Change interest to influence cost of mortgages and credit
  • Influence cost of borrowing and investment
  • Interest rates affect cost of investment and so competition and exchange rates of firms
  • An increase in consumption influences imports

Can influence level of savings as well (withdrawal)
-Exchange rates follow direction of interest so impact on current account

Evaluation:

  • Takes up to 2 years to affect inflation
  • Rate cuts make imports cheaper so risk of imported inflation
  • Requires BofE to predict future consumption inflation and investment so may be inaccurate
  • QE increases money supply, monetary inflation?
  • Reducing/reversing QE may be contractionary at home/abroad