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Seðlabanki Íslands The Icelandic Saga Conducting monetary policy with the smallest freely floating currency in the world through periods of ample global liquidity and credit crisis T. Tjörvi Olafsson Economist, Central Bank of Iceland Economics Department [email protected] Presentation at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York May 16, 2008 The opinions expressed in this presentation are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the views of the Central Bank of Iceland. Exchange rate performance against the euro since 1 August 2007 CZK CHF HUF BRL JPY AUD TRY USD NZD ZAR KRW -45 -35 -25 -15 -5 5 15 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Japan Canada Switzerland United Norway Euro area Sweden New Zealand Slovakiet South-Korea Ísrael USA Poland Australia Mexico Brazil Tailand Peru Rumenia Columbia Phillipiens Hungary Czech republic Indonesia Chile Turkey Ghana South-Africa Iceland Damaging effects of the crisis … Chart CPI inflation PLN % ISK Sources: Central Bank websites … due to lack of confidence … CDSs of Icelandic banks and Itraxx Financial Index Daily data May 23, 2006 - May 13, 2008 Points 1100 1000 900 800 700 600 500 400 300 200 100 0 maí.06 okt.06 feb.07 júl.07 des.07 maí.08 Expectations of twelve-month inflation according to the difference between forward nominal and indexed interest rates 12% 11% 10% 9% 8% 7% 6% 5% 4% 3% 2% 1% 0% 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Kaupthing 9 Years Itraxx Financial Europe 8.11.2007 13.5.2008 Glitnir Landsbanki Inflation target 14.4.2008 Sources: Bloomberg, Reuters. Heimildir: Bloomberg, Reuters. 8 Source: Central Bank of Iceland ... reflecting domestic vulnerabilities Sharp turnaround underway Overview • Rapid expansion in times of ample global liquidity, large demand shocks and the build-up of large macroeconomic imbalances • Challenges of independent monetary policy in very small open economies unwinding these imbalances • Out-of-sync with the global monetary cycle • Importance of credibility and transparency • Financial accelerator/decelerator mechanisms, carry trade and sudden-stops • Main task of monetary policy: Restore confidence • Anchor inflation expectations and stop the rapid depreciation of the Icelandic currency • Liquidity provision in foreign currency Basic information on Iceland • Very small open economy: 300,000 inhabitants • From poverty to riches in the 20th century through utilisation of its abundant natural resources • Historically a volatile economy due to resource-based exports and external supply shocks • Controlled economy for a longer period than most other developed countries • History of high and volatile inflation • Significant structural reforms over the past two decades • Market liberalisation, privatisation, fiscal consolidation • Disinflation in 1990s but unsustainable fixed exchange rate regime • Inflation targeting since 2001 • Diversification of the economy and embracement of globalisation • Still high exchange rate pass-through Inflation targeting adopted in 2001 • New Central Bank Act in May 2001 and a joint declaration of the government and the bank • Significant departure from previous regimes of different types of currency pegs • Long history of using the exchange rate as a monetary anchor with a varying degree of commitment resulting in high inflation Price stability main objective … • Price stability defined as the Bank’s single main objective • Inflation target specified as inflation of 2½%, measured in terms of twelve-month rate of change in headline CPI (house prices included) • The Central Bank granted full independence to attain its objective • Transparency and accountability strengthened • In line with best practice around the world ... but expectations remain unanchored Disappointing results • Inflation has on average been 4.9% since inflation targeting was adopted in 2001 • Inflation has been volatile, it reached a low of 1.6% and is currently at a high of 11.8% CPI inflation with and without housing % 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 -2 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 CPI inflation Inflation target CPI inflation without housing Source: Statistics Iceland 2007 2008 Booming economy • Credit boom: – Privatisation of the banks completed in 2003 – Historically low global interest rates and easy access to cheap foreign-currency borrowing • Investment boom: – Aluminium smelters and power stations – 30% of GDP in 2003 spread over three years • Asset price boom: – Real house prices up by 128% from 1997 – Equity prices up by 550% from Jan. 2003 to July 2007 • Consumption boom: – Real disposable income rose rapidly – Lowering of taxes and explicit promises – Wealth effects and easier access to credit Expansion abroad … Total assets of the largest commercial banking groups as % of GDP % of GDP 900 800 700 600 500 400 300 200 100 0 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 Total assets of the largest commercial banking groups as % of GDP Source: Central Bank of Iceland … fuelled by ample global liquidity Global liquidity index and equity price index in Iceland Global liquidity index and total assets and liabilities % of GDP 700 1.0 0.8 600 0.6 500 0.4 0.2 400 0.0 300 -0.2 -0.4 200 -0.6 100 -0.8 -1.0 1999 1.0 9,000 0.8 8,000 0.6 7,000 0.4 0.2 6,000 0.0 5,000 -0.2 4,000 -0.4 3,000 -0.6 2,000 -0.8 0 2001 2003 2005 2007 Bank of England financial market liquidity index (left) Total liabilities as % of GDP (right) -1.0 2002 1,000 2003 2004 2005 2006 2008 Bank of England financial market liquidity index (left) OMXI15 equity price index (right) Total assets as % of GDP (right) Sources: Bank of England, Statistics Iceland, Central Bank of Iceland 2007 Sources: Bank of England, OMX Stock Exchange Large capital inflows, now a sudden stop Global liquidity index and the financing of Iceland's current account deficit b.kr. -1.0 20 -0.8 0 -0.6 -0.4 -20 -0.2 0.0 -40 0.2 -60 0.4 0.6 -80 0.8 1.0 1999 -100 2001 2003 2005 2007 Current account in b.kr.(right) Bank of England financial market liquidity index (left, reverse scale) Sources: Bank of England, Statistics Iceland, Central Bank of Iceland Challenges to monetary policy • • Large demand shocks, some anticipated Should be business as usual for monetary policy making - why such disappointing results? – – – – – – Too reluctant to raise rates? Credibility issues? Faulty analysis and data? Institutional framework hindering an effective transmission of monetary policy? Insufficient support from the fiscal authorities? Special problems in conducting monetary policy in very small open economies? Challenges to monetary policy (cont.) • Financial accelerator effects: – Household, corporate and bank balance sheets have multiplied in size as the commercial banks and firms have expanded abroad and equity and house prices have risen briskly – Icelanders took advantage of easy access to foreign credit, leverage increased rapidly and macroeconomic imbalances built up – The Icelandic economy was therefore vulnerable when the credit crisis emerged and financial decelerator effects are gaining momentum Households Private sector credit Communication problem ... • • • • Limited credibility Illiquid markets Unpredictable monetary policy Large imbalances create large uncertainties regarding prospects Publication of own policy rate path … ... has had some positive effects … ... but challenges remain Swap agreements with Nordic banks • Lack of access to foreign currency liquidity facilities • Swap market failure • Depreciation of the króna • Swap agreements with three other Nordic central banks announced today – Precautionary measure – 500 million EUR each • Strengthening króna Mynd 4 Chart 1 FX swap-implied ISK rates minus EUR Libor and the Icelandic króna Daily data, August 2007 - May 2008 % EURISK 12 82 10 90 8 98 6 106 4 114 2 0 122 -2 130 ágú.07 sep.07 okt.07 nóv.07 jan.08 feb.08 mar.08 maí.08 1-month interest rate diffential (left) 3-month interest rate diffential (left) EURISK, reversed (right) Sources: Bloomberg, Central Bank of Iceland. Final remarks • Smallest country in the world with a fully freely floating currency • Efficiency costs associated with such a small currency area vs. the benefits of macroeconomic stabilisation due to a shock absorbing role of the exchange rate and independent monetary policy • Widely discussed in Iceland at the moment Final remarks (cont.) • Icelandic economy more volatile than most other small open economies and hence attaining an inflation target is more difficult – Role of the exchange rate • Specially challenging circumstances in the last few years domestically and globally – how representative of the years to come? • Lack of credibility of monetary policy make Iceland more vulnerable than e.g. New Zealand • Lack of lender of last resort in foreign currency make the commercial banks more vulnerable • Monetary policy’s main aim is to restore credibility as soon as possible, today’s measure is a step in that direction