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Chapter 23 Modern Monetary Policy and the Challenges Facing Central Bankers McGraw-Hill/Irwin © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2008 Modern Monetary Policy: The Big Questions 1. What are the various channels of monetary policy transmission? 2. What are the factors that make modern monetary policy so difficult? 23-2 Japan and the U.S. What made the Japanese and U.S. experiences of the last 20 years so different? 23-3 Japan: Growth and Interest Rates 23-4 U.S.: Growth and Interest Rates 23-5 Modern Monetary Policy: Roadmap • Monetary Policy Transmission Mechanism • Challenges Facing Modern Monetary Policymakers 23-6 The Monetary Policy Transmission Mechanism: Traditional Channels Interest Rates and Exchange Rates the traditional channels of monetary policy transmission aren’t very powerful 23-7 The Monetary Policy Transmission Mechanism: Credit Channels Bank Lending and Balance Sheet Channels • By altering the supply of funds to the banking system, policymakers can affect banks' ability and willingness to lend • an open market purchase has a direct impact on the supply of loans, increasing their availability to those who depend on banks for financing • as interest rates fall, the supply of loans increases 23-8 The Monetary Policy Transmission Mechanism: Asset Price Channels Investment and Wealth • a fall in the interest rate – pushes stock prices up – drives the mortgage rate down leading to higher demand for residential housing, driving up the prices of existing homes • Higher asset prices mean increased wealth and higher consumption 23-9 The Monetary Policy Transmission Mechanism 23-10 • If neighborhoods with high crime rates have more police, does that mean police cause crime? • Finding correlations is straightforward • Establishing causal relationships is difficult 23-11 • Why did Japan’s economy fail to respond to interest rates near zero? • One possibility is that the stock market collapse lowered borrower net worth • In addition, with borrowers unable to repay, banks had virtually no capital and could not make additional loans. 23-12 23-13 The Challenges Modern Monetary Policymakers Face: Estimating Potential During the late 1990s, people failed to recognize potential output was growing more rapidly than it had earlier. As a result, forecasts of GDP were consistently too low. 23-14 • Computing real returns means subtracting inflation from nominal returns • In order to evaluation nominal interest rates, wage increase and the like, you need to know the level of inflation 23-15 In the 1970s inflation rose in two big bursts 23-16 One possible explanation is that Fed policymakers failed to realize that growth had slowed. 23-17 The Challenges Modern Monetary Policymakers Face: Deflation Deflation & Zero Nominal Interest Rate Bound: – Nominal interest rates can't fall below zero – This places a restriction on what monetary policymakers can do – The most effective way to expand the monetary base when the overnight interest rate has fallen to zero is to shift to targeting longer-term rates. 23-18 The Challenges Modern Monetary Policymakers Face: Booms and Busts Booms & Busts in Equity & Property Prices Bubbles that inflate and then burst are particularly damaging, because the wealth effects they create cause consumption to explode and then contract just as rapidly. 23-19 The Nasdaq Bubble 23-20 The Challenges Modern Monetary Policymakers Face Evolving Financial Structure changes in financial structure will change the impact of monetary policy. 23-21 Chapter 23 End of Chapter McGraw-Hill/Irwin © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2008