Monetary Institutions and Strategies Flashcards

1
Q

What is the definition of “Adaptive expectations”?

A
  • Theory that people’s expectations of a variable are based on past levels of the variable; also, backward-looking expectations
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2
Q

Definition of Rational expectations:

A
  • Theory that people’s expectations of future variables are the best possible forecasts based on all available information
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3
Q

the Phillips curve:

Formula

The behavior of inflation depends on expectations

A
  • “p” is inflation,
  • “p​e is expected inflation,
  • Y~ is the output gap (the percentage deviation of output from potential),
  • “x” is a coefficient showing how strongly output affects inflation
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4
Q

Time-consistency problem

A
  • A situation in which someone has incentives to make a promise but later to renege on it; because of these incentives, others don’t believe the promise

Lack of consistency

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5
Q

Rational Expectations and Costless Disinflation (graph)

A
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6
Q

Definition of “Conservative policymaker”?

A
  • It is central bank official who believes it is more important to keep inflation low than to stimulate output

governments appoint the policymakers who run central banks.

if policymakers are conservative (or a clear economic believes) , the time-consistency problem disappears. The central bank can promise inflation of “p” ideal and people will believe it.

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7
Q

With what option you solve the time consistency problem of the central bank?

A
  1. Conservative Policymakers
  2. Reputation
  3. A Policy Rule
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8
Q

How reputation of the head of the central bank can help to solve the time-consistency problem ?

A
  • they would like people to believe that they are conservative (even if they are not). This concern can solve the time-consistency problem.
  • When a new chairman is appointed , he/she can decide what reputation want according to it first actions.
  • In this theory, it is desirable for policymakers to care a lot about their reputations. This happens if policymakers have long time horizons
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9
Q

how to solve time-consistency with a policy rule?

A
  • The government imposes a rule requiring the central bank to produce low inflation or not
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10
Q

what argument use against the independence of the central bank ?

A
  • Their central argument is a political one: in a democracy, elected officials should control economic policy.
  • They fear that the priorities of central banks are those of financial interests, not ordinary citizens
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11
Q

What are the arguments for central bank independence?

A
  • A long-standing argument is that independence protects the Fed from political pressures for unwise policies
  • Reduce the time-consistency problem (Conservative Central Bankers and Long Horizons)
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12
Q

Definition of Discretionary policy:

A
  • A monetary policy that is adjusted at each point in time based on the judgment of the central bank
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13
Q

Definition of Monetary-policy rule:

A
  • A simple rule or formula that tells the central bank how to run policy
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14
Q

Who are the Monetarists ?

A
  • They are school of economists who believe that monetary policy has strong effects on the economy and that policy should be set by a rule
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15
Q

what are the problems with discretionary policy according to Monetarists?

A
  1. Well-Intentioned Mistakes
  2. Political Influence (some presidents still had influence)
    * All this could be solve with a set of rules
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16
Q

what are the mains types of inflation targeting ?

A
  • Strict targeting

Hitting the inflation target is the central bank’s only goal. If shocks push inflation away from the target, policy pushes it back as quickly as possible.

  • Flexible targeting

The central bank is not concerned only with inflation; it also pays attention to the goal of output stability

In practice, it appears that central banks choose flexible inflation targeting.

17
Q

what are the arguments in favor Inflation targeting ?

A
  • First, in many circumstances inflation targeting naturally stabilizes output as well as inflation.This fact follows from the Phillips curve
  • inflation targeting is flexible
18
Q

what is Transparency for the central bank ?

A
  • providing clear, detailed information about policymaking to the public
19
Q

how the central bank provided of information ? (tranparency)

A
  • Many central banks issue publications that give the rationale for recent decisions.
  • publish the economic forecasts produced by their staffs
  • publish minutes of the meetings at which interest rates are set
  • officials hold press conferences to explain their actions and take questions
20
Q

Why Practice Transparency? , according to the central banks

A
  • political
  • effect on inflation expectations
  • helps policymakers control long-term interest rates