Lecture 18
MONETARY POLICY
1. Floating Exchange Rates
- Suppose the central bank buys govt securities (domestic assets) on the open market
- Ms increases
- Interest rate falls
- Consumption and Investment will rise
- The AE-line shifts up
- Eqbm GNP rises
- The decrease in R leads to:
Greater capital outflows leading to ...
depreciation of the domestic currency which causes ...
net exports to rise causing ...
the AE-line to shift up yet again and...
GNP to rise further
- Results:
- The increase in GNP is magnified (why?)
- Lower interest rates
- A weaker currency
- Decrease in capital account surplus and current account deficit
- Smaller budget deficit
- Higher investment
2. Fixed Exchange Rates
- Suppose the central bank buys domestic assets (govt. securities) on the open market
- Decrease in interest rates
- Decrease in R leads to capital outflows
- Domestic currency will tend to depreciate ...
But since the exchange rate is fixed ...
... the central bank must prevent the incipient depreciation by ...
... selling foreign-exchange reserves
- Domestic money supply falls back to original level
- Interest rate rises (to original level, R0)
- Since R has not changed, AE is unaffected ...
... implying that GNP remains the same!
- Results:
- Monetary policy is ineffective at raising GNP
- No change in interest rates
- Increase in the central bank's holdings of domestic assets is exactly offset by decrease in holdings of foreign reserve assets
Conclusion: Monetary policy is ineffective under fixed exchange rates.
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