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Monetary policy - Trends in Central Banking

Monetary policy - Trends in Central Banking: Encyclopedia II - Monetary policy - Trends in Central Banking

The central bank influences interest rates by expanding or contracting the monetary base, which consists of currency in circulation and banks' reserves on deposit at the central bank. The primary way that the central bank can affect the monetary base is by open market operations or sales and purchases of second hand government debt, or by changing the reserve requirements. If the central bank wishes to lower interest rates, it purchases government debt, thereby increasing the amount of cash in circulation or crediting banks' reserve accounts ...

See also:

Monetary policy, Monetary policy - Overview, Monetary policy - History of Monetary Policy, Monetary policy - Trends in Central Banking, Monetary policy - Developing countries, Monetary policy - Types of Monetary Policy, Monetary policy - Inflation Targeting, Monetary policy - Price Level Targeting, Monetary policy - Monetary Aggregates, Monetary policy - Fixed Exchange Rate, Monetary policy - Gold Standard, Monetary policy - Mixed Policy, Monetary policy - Monetary Policy Tools, Monetary policy - Monetary Base, Monetary policy - Reserve Requirements, Monetary policy - Discount Window Lending, Monetary policy - Interest Rates, Monetary policy - Currency board, Monetary policy - Monetary Policy Theory, Monetary policy - Monetary Policy Used by Various Nations

Monetary policy, Monetary policy - Currency board, Monetary policy - Developing countries, Monetary policy - Discount Window Lending, Monetary policy - Fixed Exchange Rate, Monetary policy - Gold Standard, Monetary policy - History of Monetary Policy, Monetary policy - Inflation Targeting, Monetary policy - Interest Rates, Monetary policy - Mixed Policy, Monetary policy - Monetary Aggregates, Monetary policy - Monetary Base, Monetary policy - Monetary Policy Theory, Monetary policy - Monetary Policy Tools, Monetary policy - Monetary Policy Used by Various Nations, Monetary policy - Overview, Monetary policy - Price Level Targeting, Monetary policy - Reserve Requirements, Monetary policy - Trends in Central Banking, Monetary policy - Types of Monetary Policy, Contractionary monetary policy, Currency devaluation, Expansionary monetary policy, Monetary base, Monetary policy of the Eurozone, Monetary policy of the USA, Monetary policy of Sweden, Money, International reserve system

Monetary policy: Encyclopedia II - Monetary policy - Trends in Central Banking



Monetary policy - Trends in Central Banking

The central bank influences interest rates by expanding or contracting the monetary base, which consists of currency in circulation and banks' reserves on deposit at the central bank. The primary way that the central bank can affect the monetary base is by open market operations or sales and purchases of second hand government debt, or by changing the reserve requirements. If the central bank wishes to lower interest rates, it purchases government debt, thereby increasing the amount of cash in circulation or crediting banks' reserve accounts. Alternatively, it can lower the interest rate on discounts or overdrafts (basically loans to banks secured by suitable collateral, specified by the central bank). If the interest rate on such transactions is sufficiently low, commercial banks can borrow from the central bank to meet reserve requirements and use the additional liquidity to expand their balance sheets, increasing the credit available to the economy. Lowering reserve requirements has a similar effect, freeing up funds for banks to increase loans or buy other profitable assets.

A central bank can only operate a truly independent monetary policy when the exchange rate is floating. If the exchange rate is pegged or managed in any way, the central bank will have to purchase or sell foreign exchange. These transactions in foreign exchange will have an effect on the monetary base analogous to open market purchases and sales of government debt; if the central bank buys foreign exchange, the monetary base expands, and vice versa.

Accordingly, the management of the exchange rate will influence domestic monetary conditions. In order to maintain its monetary policy target, the central bank will have to sterilize or offset its foreign exchange operations. For example, if a central bank buys foreign exchange (to counteract appreciation of the exchange rate), base money will increase. Therefore, to sterilize that increase, the central bank must also sell government debt to contract the monetary base by an equal amount. It follows that turbulent activity in foreign exchange markets can cause a central bank to lose control of domestic monetary policy when it is also managing the exchange rate.

In the 1980s, many economists began to believe that making a nation's central bank independent of the rest of executive government is the best way to ensure an optimal monetary policy, and those central banks which did not have independence began to gain it. This is to avoid overt manipulation of the tools of monetary policies to effect political goals, such as re-electing the current government. Independence typically means that the members of the committee which conducts monetary policy have long, fixed terms. Obviously, this is a somewhat limited independence. Independence has not stunted a thriving crop of conspiracy theories about the true motives of a given action of monetary policy.

In the 1990s central banks began adopting formal, public inflation targets with the goal of making the outcomes, if not the process, of monetary policy more transparent. That is, a central bank may have an inflation target of 2% for a given year, and if inflation turns out to be 5%, then the central bank will typically have to submit an explanation.

The Bank of England exemplifies both these trends. It became independent of government through the Bank of England Act 1998 and adopted an inflation target of 2.5%.

the debate rages on about whether monetary policy can smooth business cycles or not. A central conjecture of Keynesian economics is that the central bank can stimulate aggregate demand in the short run, because a significant number of prices in the economy are fixed in the short run and firms will produce as many goods and services as are demanded (in the long run, however, money is neutral, as in the neoclassical model). The Austrian school of economics, which includes Friedrich von Hayek and Ludwig von Misesan argument, but most economists fall into either the Keynesian or neoclassical camps on this issue.

Other related archives

1930s, 1971, Alan Greenspan, Argentina, Australia, Austrian school of economics, Bank of England, Bretton Woods system, Bulgaria, Central banks, China, Consumer Price Index, Contractionary monetary policy, Currency devaluation, Economic policy, European Central Bank, Eurozone, Expansionary monetary policy, Federal Reserve, Friedrich von Hayek, Great Depression, Hong Kong, International reserve system, Keynesian economics, Ludwig von Misesan, Macroeconomics, Monetary base, Monetary policy, Monetary policy of Sweden, Monetary policy of the USA, Money, New Zealand, South Africa, Sweden, United Kingdom, United States dollar, adaptive expectations, aggregate demand, balance of payments, banks' reserve accounts, bond market, bonds, business cycle, business cycles, central banks, consumers, contractionary, cost push inflation, credit, currency, demand pull inflation, deposits, derivatives, discount rate, economic growth, equities, exchange rate, exchange rate regimes, exchange rates, executive, executive government, expansionary, federal funds rate, fiat money, firms, fiscal policy, fixed exchange rate, foreign exchange, foreign exchange reserves, full employment, futures contracts, gold standard, inflation, interbank rate, interest rate, interest rates, marginal benefit, marginal cost, monetarism, monetary base, money supply, neoclassical model, open market operations, options, paper money, rational expectations, renminbi, reserve requirements, seniorage, speculation, supply of money, swaps, unemployment, vault



Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Trends in Central Banking", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki

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