Browsing by Subject "Europäische Zentralbank"
Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
- Results Per Page
- Sort Options
Publication How the ECB and the US fed set interest rates(2006) Polleit, Thorsten; Belke, AnsgarMonetary policies of the ECB and US Fed can be characterised by ?Taylor rules?, that is both central banks seem to be setting rates by taking into account the ?output gap? and inflation. We also set up and tested Taylor rules which incorporate money growth and the euro-dollar exchange rate, thereby improving the ?fit? between actual and Taylor rule based rates. In general, Taylor rules appear to be a much better way of describing Fed policy than ECB policy. Simulations suggest that the ECB?s short-term interest rates have been at a much lower level in the last two years compared with what a Taylor rule would suggest.Publication Money matters for inflation in the euro area(2006) Polleit, Thorsten; Belke, Ansgar; Kösters, Wim; Leschke, MartinPART 1 ECB independence and price stability The success of the stability oriented monetary policy of the ECB depends on the acceptance of the bank?s institutional set-up. In this context, the ECB?s political independence seems to be of the utmost importance. However, important pillars for safeguarding the bank?s political independence ? such as, for instance, governments? adherence to the European Stability and Growth Pact and the acceptance of the division of labor between fiscal and monetary policy ? induced) financial crisis which, in turn, could have a highly negative impact on output and employment. PART 2 Monetary policy and structural reforms What role does monetary policy play for structural reform in open economies? Empirical estimations were performed with panel data for 23 OECD countries from 1970 to 2000. Structural reform was measured by the Economic Freedom of the World index, whereas the monetary policy constraints were measured by a monetary commitment index and the prevailing exchange rate regime. ? Our results provide little evidence for the hypothesis that a discretionary monetary policy promotes structural reform and economic freedom. The results strongly argue against those views maintaining that a business cycle oriented and lax monetary policy has never and nowhere been detrimental for employment. In fact, our results show that discretionary monetary policies tend to lead to a lower degree of structural labor market reform and, hence, to lower employment. That said, the ECB should pursue a medium- to long-term oriented monetary policy if it wants to strengthen growth and employment in the euro area via supporting reforms. PART 3 A critical view of the real interest rate concept The concept of the neutral (real) interest rate (NRIR) ? as implied by the Taylor rule ? recommends monetary policy to set real interest rates at a level that closes, or at least smoothes, the output gap. We argue that such a policy, if put into practice, would entail substantial pitfalls. First, monetary policy is an inadequate tool for influencing real GDP: the central bank?s impact on long-term interest rates and GDP is actually small (or not existing); to make things worse, a cyclically oriented policy would provoke the well-known time-lag problem. Second, and perhaps most importantly, the NRIR concept is not necessarily compatible with price stability, as it ignores the impact of credit and money growth on inflation. ? As a result, we are in favour of a long-term oriented monetary policy that has a strong focus on money and credit growth and asset prices. Such a monetary policy would not only be compatible with the objective of price stability. It would also reduce the risk of the economy falling into (a monetary induced) financial crisis which, in turn, could have a highly negative impact on output and employment. PART 4 ECB monetary policy and euro inflation outlook Even at a main refinancing rate of 3.25%, ECB monetary policy remains very expansionary. We forecast annual HICP inflation in 2007 to be 2.3% on average (including the German VAT hike). Due to strong excess liquidity, annual consumer price inflation is likely to remain at 2.3% in 2008. We recommend raising ECB rates further to around 4.0%, for reducing credit and money supply growth, thereby dampening inflationary pressure. ? Our money demand analyses for the euro area suggest that, in recent years, excess liquidity might have been translating in great part into asset price inflation rather than consumer price inflation. The results indicate that headline M3 growth is actually much more closely related to the ongoing loss of purchasing of money power of the euro ? that is consumer and asset price inflation ? than may be widely believed. That said, for keeping inflation in check it seems advisable for the ECB to set interest rates in line with the signals provided by (trend) money supply (excess liquidity).