Günter W. Beck University of Frankfurt and CFS Volker Wieland
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Transcript of Günter W. Beck University of Frankfurt and CFS Volker Wieland
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Günter W. BeckUniversity of Frankfurt and CFS
Volker WielandECB*, CFS and University of Frankfurt
National Bank of Belgium ConferenceBrussels, October 17, 2008
•Disclaimer: Duisenberg Research Fellow. The views expressed should not be attributed to the European Central Bank or its staff.
Central Bank Misperceptions and the Central Bank Misperceptions and the
Role of Money in Interest Rate RulesRole of Money in Interest Rate Rules Central Bank Misperceptions and the Central Bank Misperceptions and the
Role of Money in Interest Rate RulesRole of Money in Interest Rate Rules
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Are monetary aggregates relevant for monetary policy design?
New- (and traditional) Keynesian models - No! Lucas (2007) expresses the following concerns:
„Money supply measures play no role in the estimation, testing or policy simulation of these (NK) models …formulated in terms of deviations from trends that are determined off stage … (they) could be reformulated to give a unified account of trends, including monetary aggregates, and deviations ...”
„This remains an unresolved issue on the frontier of macroeconomic theory. Until it is resolved, monetary information should continue be used as a kind of add-on or cross-check.”
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Our objective
Show that central bank misperceptions regarding unobservable equilibrium values may be at the root of proportional money growth and inflation trends.
Propose an approach to cross-checking with money (extend Beck and Wieland, JEEA 2007). Helps avoid persistent deviations from the inflation target in the event of misperceptions such as those observed historically.
Show that cross-checking remains effective with velocity shifts. Investigate benefits from nonlinearity of cross-checking and from alternative measures for cross-checking in place of money.
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Outline
1. Our use of output gap misperceptions and optimal policy design (helps avoid some a-priori assumptions on unobservables).
2. Explaining money and inflation trends
3. Cross-checking monetary trends in interest rate policy
4. Some additional questions
5. Conclusions
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Traditional and New-Keynesian Phillips curves.
K-Model:
NK-Model:
1. Output gap misperceptions and optimal policy
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Policy objective
Loss function (strict inflation targeting, i.e. output gap only matters because of Keynesian view that it determines inflation.)
First-order condition
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Optimal policy
Output level that achieves foc is:
Optimal policy under uncertainty:
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Standard approach: a-priori assumptions regarding unobservables
Typically, optimal policy is determined conditional on some a-priori assumptions regarding unobservables such as potential output, productivity trends, etc.. For example, Svensson and Woodford (2003) or Wieland (2006) use
with known persistence parameter and shock distribution.
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Separation of control and estimation
Certainty-equivalence applies, separate control and estimation (Kalman filter), optimal policy responds linearly to best, model-consistent estimate of output gap.
The optimal value of the interest rate follows from the IS equation:
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Optimal interest rate policy
May be expressed as Taylor-style policy rules. In K-model, it is typically assumed that no information on shock is available, in NK typically a signal is given:
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The irrelevance of monetary aggregates
Include money demand
But it is determined recursively and does not show up in optimal interest rate policy on right-hand-side. (open-market operations implemented to achieve prescribed interest rate)
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Use historical misperceptions and avoid a-priori assumptions
Use real-time potential and output gap estimates from Orphanides (2003) and Gerberding et al (2007), compared to final estimates (1994 for Orphanides).
Misperception et:
Perceived potential:
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Historical output gap misperceptions
US: Orphanides, The quest for prosperity without inflation, J.Monetary Economics, 2003.Germany: Gerberding, Seitz, Worms, How the Bundesbank really conducted policy, North American Journal of Economics and Finance, 2005.
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2. Explaining money and inflation trends
Why Lucas (2007) talks about trends:
Chart from Benati (2005), see also Gerlach (2004), and others.
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Explanations
Literature: random walk inflation targets Our paper: constant target but central bank
misperceptions with regard to potential output (or equilibrium real interest rates).
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Relate money and inflation trends
NK/K model:
Empirically: filtered measures (Gerlach, others)
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Misperceptions cause proportional money and inflation trends
K-Model / US misperceptions (single draw of other shocks)
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Inflation inherits dynamics of misperceptions
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Misperceptions cause proportional money and inflation trends (ave 1000 draws)
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3. Cross-checking
Recall policy design conditional on Keynesian model:
consequently,
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Alternatively, a Friedman-type monetarist...
.. would expect trend inflation to follow long-run money growth:
and conduct open-market operations such that
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Of course, if the Keynesian models are correct, then
.... the same implications for trend inflation and trend money growth will apply.
Introduce a test statistic for a mean shift:
... and check if κ>κcrit or κ< -κ crit for N periods.
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If cross-check signals shift, then
... set policy such that
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Policy following a significant cross-check
These policies consist of two components:
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Cross-checking in the NK model
US misperceptions
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Cross-checking in NK model
German misperceptions
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4. Further questions.
Linear rules with adjustment are suboptimal (2 cases, with and without misperceptions).
Persistent velocity shifts (money demand parameters change) can be accounted for by re-estimating money demand equations regularly (Orphanides and Porter 2000, 2001).
Other trend inflation measures, such as filtered inflation work too. Recall, there is not lead of money growth on inflation in this model. (Future work consider models that can generate a lead of money growth on inflation).
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Linear versus Nonlinear Policies
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Persistent Velocity Shifts
Shifting intercept and recursive estimation (Orphanides and Porter 2000, 2001).
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Persistent Velocity Shifts
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Other Cross-Checks
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5. Conclusions
New explanation of empirical findings on money growth and inflation trends.
Implement Lucas proposal of monetary cross-checking (ECB ? )
Cross-checking may be useful general concept in the case of decision making under model uncertainty, (no requirement to restrict focus to money).