L ECTURE 7 Monetary Policy at the Zero Lower Bound: Expectations - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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L ECTURE 7 Monetary Policy at the Zero Lower Bound: Expectations - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Economics 210c/236a Christina Romer Fall 2018 David


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LECTURE 7

Monetary Policy at the Zero Lower Bound: Expectations Effects October 3, 2018

Economics 210c/236a Christina Romer Fall 2018 David Romer

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  • I. OVERVIEW
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Cases of Countries Hitting the Zero Lower Bound

  • US and UK in the 1930s.
  • Japan starting in the late 1990s.
  • US, Europe, and Japan starting in 2008.
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Papers for Today

  • Temin and Wigmore (U.S. in the 1930s)
  • Eggertsson and Pugsley (U.S. in 1937)
  • Wieland (Japan, mainly in the 1990s and 2000s)
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How can monetary policy matter at the zero lower bound?

  • Expectations effects.
  • Expectations of prices, growth, future interest

rates.

  • Quantitative easing and portfolio balance effects.
  • Others?
  • Special case of the exchange rate.
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  • II. TEMIN AND WIGMORE, “THE END OF ONE BIG

DEFLATION”

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From: Romer, “What Ended the Great Depression?”

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Nominal Interest Rate (3-6 mo. Treasury Notes)

1 2 3 4 5 6 Jan-29 Jul-29 Jan-30 Jul-30 Jan-31 Jul-31 Jan-32 Jul-32 Jan-33 Jul-33 Jan-34 Jul-34 Jan-35 Jul-35 Percent

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Industrial Production

1929-01 1929-07 1930-01 1930-07 1931-01 1931-07 1932-01 1932-07 1933-01 1933-07 1934-01 1934-07 1935-01 1935-07 1936-01 1936-07 1937-01 1937-07

1.0 1.2 1.4 1.6 1.8 2.0 2.2 2.4 Industrial Production (Logarithms)

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What is a regime shift?

  • A dramatic change in the policy framework.
  • Leads agents to expect long-lasting changes in policy.
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Roosevelt’s Regime Shift

  • Hoover was committed to the gold standard,

monetary inaction, and fiscal orthodoxy.

  • Roosevelt devalued in April 1933. Temin and

Wigmore believe devaluation was the key sign of the regime shift.

  • Followed up with fiscal and monetary expansion.
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From: Christina Romer, “What Ended the Great Depression?”

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Roosevelt’s Communications Policy

  • Second Fireside Chat, May 7, 1933:

“The Administration has the definite objective of raising commodity prices to such an extent that those who have borrowed money will, on the average, be able to repay that money in the same kind of dollar which they borrowed. … That is why powers are being given to the Administration to provide, if necessary, for an enlargement of credit …”

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Stock Prices

1.5 6.5 11.5 16.5 21.5 26.5 31.5 36.5 Jan-27 Aug-27 Mar-28 Oct-28 May-29 Dec-29 Jul-30 Feb-31 Sep-31 Apr-32 Nov-32 Jun-33 Jan-34 Aug-34 Mar-35 Oct-35 May-36 Dec-36 Monthly S&P Stock Price Index

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Producer Price Index, All Commodities

2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 2.8 2.9 Jan-29 Aug-29 Mar-30 Oct-30 May-31 Dec-31 Jul-32 Feb-33 Sep-33 Apr-34 Nov-34 Jun-35 Jan-36 Aug-36 Mar-37 Oct-37 Producer Price Index, Logarithms

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Expected Inflation as Measured Using Commodity Futures Prices

  • 12.00
  • 9.00
  • 6.00
  • 3.00

0.00 3.00 6.00 9.00 1928:1 1929:1 1930:1 1931:1 1932:1 1933:1 1934:1 1935:1 1936:1 1937:1 Percent

From: Hamilton, “Was the Deflation During the Great Depression Anticipated?”

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Devaluation in April 1933

Price of Cotton ($) Exchange Rate ($ / ₤)

Price of Cotton, in cents Exchange Rate

From: Temin and Wigmore, “The End of One Big Deflation”

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From: Jalil and Rua, “Inflation Expectations and Recovery in Spring 1933”

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From: Jalil and Rua, “Inflation Expectations and Recovery in Spring 1933”

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From: Jalil and Rua, “Inflation Expectations and Recovery in Spring 1933”

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Truck Production, 1927-1936

10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 Jan-27 Jul-27 Jan-28 Jul-28 Jan-29 Jul-29 Jan-30 Jul-30 Jan-31 Jul-31 Jan-32 Jul-32 Jan-33 Jul-33 Jan-34 Jul-34 Jan-35 Jul-35 Jan-36 Jul-36 Thousands of Trucks

From: FRED, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

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Investment and Consumption Spending, 1932-33

Nondurables Consumption Investment

From: Temin and Wigmore, “The End of One Big Deflation”

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Evaluation

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  • III. EGGERTSSON AND PUGSLEY, “THE MISTAKE OF 1937”
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How Eggertsson and Pugsley Fit Into the Lecture

  • Temin and Wigmore say a switch to an inflationary

regime can be helpful at the ZLB

  • Use April 1933 as an example.
  • Eggertsson and Pugsley say a change in expectations
  • f future policy away from reflation and expansion

can be very damaging at the ZLB.

  • Use 1937–38 recession as an example.
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Industrial Production, 1926–1941

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Alternative Explanations for the 1937–38 Recession

  • Increase in reserve requirements (Friedman and

Schwartz, Calomiris, Mason, and Wheelock)

  • Sterilization of gold inflows (Irwin)
  • Fiscal contraction
  • Supply shocks (Hausman)
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Eggertsson and Pugsley’s Explanation

  • Policymakers started expressing concern about

inflation and deficits.

  • Caused a negative change in expectations of future

policy.

  • This had contractionary effects on real activity.
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Eggertsson and Pugsley’s Model

  • DSGE model with binding zero lower bound due to

real shocks.

  • Calibrate model and find that inflation and output

are extremely sensitive to changes in beliefs about future policy at ZLB. (Sensitivity is asymmetric.)

  • Source of sensitivity is “contractionary spiral”—

change in expectations in one instance affects expectations in other situations, and those expectations feed on each other (vicious feedback loop).

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Eggertsson and Pugsley’s Evidence

  • Narrative evidence from statements and actions.
  • Behavior of commodity prices.
  • Behavior of long-rates relative to short rates.
  • The behavior of the economy when statements and

actions changed back.

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From: Eggertsson and Pugsley, “The Mistake of 1937”

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From: Eggertsson and Pugsley, “The Mistake of 1937”

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From: Eggertsson and Pugsley, “The Mistake of 1937”

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From: Eggertsson and Pugsley, “The Mistake of 1937”

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From: Eggertsson and Pugsley, “The Mistake of 1937”

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Matches Model to Data from the Depression

  • Calibrates and makes assumptions to match the

Depression experience.

  • γ is expected probability of a switch from inflationary

to deflationary regime.

  • Estimates what series for γ would best match the

actual behavior of inflation and output.

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From: Eggertsson and Pugsley, “The Mistake of 1937”

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Evaluation

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  • IV. JOHANNES WIELAND, “ARE NEGATIVE SUPPLY

SHOCKS EXPANSIONARY AT THE ZERO LOWER BOUND?”

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Motivation

  • Standard models have counterintuitive implications

at the zero lower bound (various “paradoxes”).

  • A central implication of this type: An adverse supply

shock, by raising expected inflation and so lowering the real interest rate, is expansionary at the zero lower bound.

  • Wieland wants to test this prediction and investigate

the implications of the results.

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Key Questions

  • Empirical: Are specific supply shocks (the Great

Japan Earthquake, falls in oil supply) expansionary at the zero lower bound?

  • Theoretical: If the answer is no, how broad are the

implications? (For example, does it have implications for the fiscal multiplier at the zero lower bound? For measures to raise expected inflation through expectations of future monetary policy?)

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Theory—Building Blocks

  • New Keynesian IS curve:

𝑑̇ 𝑢 = 𝑗 𝑢 − 𝜌 𝑢 − 𝜍.

  • New Keynesian Phillips curve:

𝜌̇ 𝑢 = 𝜍𝜌 𝑢 − κ∗[𝑧 𝑢 − 𝑧 𝑢 ] = 𝜍𝜌 𝑢 − κ∗ 𝑑 𝑢 − 𝑏 𝑢 , where a is productivity.

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Theory—Implications for Levels

  • Assume that in the long run, c = π = 0.
  • New Keynesian IS curve:

𝑑(𝑢) = 𝑗 𝑢 + 𝜐 − 𝜌 𝑢 + 𝜐 − 𝜍 𝑒𝜐

∞ 𝜐=0

𝑢 .

  • New Keynesian Phillips curve:

𝜌 𝑢 = κ∗ 𝑓−𝜍𝜐[

∞ 𝜐=0

𝑑 𝑢 + 𝜐 − 𝑏 𝑢 + 𝜐 ]𝑒𝜐.

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Theory—Effects of a Negative Productivity Shock at the Zero Lower Bound

  • Assume:
  • 𝑏 𝑢 = 𝑏

< 0 for 0 ≤ 𝑢 ≤ 𝑈, 0 otherwise.

  • For 𝑢 ≥ 𝑈, 𝜌 𝑢 = 𝑧 𝑢 = 0.
  • i doesn’t respond to the shock. For simplicity, 𝑗 𝑢

equals 𝜍 for all 𝑢. (Note that 𝜍 is the steady state value of i.)

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Effects of a Negative Productivity Shock at the ZLB

From: Wieland, “Are Negative Supply Shocks Expansionary at the Zero Lower Bound?”

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Test 1: The Japanese Great Earthquake of March 2011

  • Nominal interest rates fell slightly.
  • Industrial production: Fell 15.8% from March to April

(rose 1.9% from April to May).

  • Real GDP: fell at a 5.9% annual rate in 2011Q1, and

at a 2.1% annual rate in 2011Q2.

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Test 1: The Japanese Great Earthquake of March 2011

From: Wieland, “Are Negative Supply Shocks Expansionary at the Zero Lower Bound?”

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What Do We Learn from:

  • The behavior of forecasts of inflation?
  • The behavior of forecasts of real GDP?
  • The actual behavior of output and inflation?
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Test #2: Adverse Oil Supply Shocks

  • 1. Adding oil price shocks to the baseline new

Keynesian model.

  • 2. Identifying oil supply shocks.
  • 3. How oil prices and expected inflation behave

following a shock.

  • 4. Results.
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Step 2: Identifying Oil Supply Shocks

  • A VAR with a timing assumption: “I assume

that oil production responds to other structural shocks (e.g., demand shocks) with at least a one-month delay.”

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Step 3: How Oil Prices Behave Following a Shock

From: Wieland, “Are Negative Supply Shocks Expansionary at the Zero Lower Bound?”

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Step 3: How πe Behaves Following a Shock

From: Wieland, “Are Negative Supply Shocks Expansionary at the Zero Lower Bound?”

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Step 4: Results

From: Wieland, “Are Negative Supply Shocks Expansionary at the Zero Lower Bound?”

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Step 4: Results

From: Wieland, “Are Negative Supply Shocks Expansionary at the Zero Lower Bound?”

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Extra Test: The Libyan Civil War and the U.S.

From: Wieland, “Are Negative Supply Shocks Expansionary at the Zero Lower Bound?”

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Discussion

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Interpretation

  • Is he presenting evidence against a narrow or a broad

class of models?

  • Hard to know!
  • Example: Fiscal policy.
  • Wieland argues that, “In the standard new

Keynesian model testing for expansionary negative supply shocks is the same as testing for a large fiscal multiplier.”

  • But this doesn’t rule out large fiscal multipliers at

the zero lower bound through a traditional Keynesian multiplier.

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Other Possible Models

  • Old Keynesian models?
  • Models with credit constraints.
  • Replacing the new Keynesian Philips curve with a

sticky information Phillips curve.

  • Other paths in the standard new Keynesian model.
  • …?
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  • V. A LITTLE ON ABENOMICS
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Overview

  • Shinzō Abe became Prime Minister in

December 2012.

  • Initial measures:
  • Change in leadership at Bank of Japan.
  • Change in inflation target (from 1% to 2%).
  • Doubling of monetary base, massive QE.
  • Deliberate depreciation of the yen.
  • Many subsequent measures.
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Financial Market Variables

Source: Hausman and Wieland, “Overcoming the Lost Decades?”

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Source: Bank of Japan.

Inflation

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GDP Forecasts

Source: Hausman and Wieland, “Overcoming the Lost Decades?”

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GDP

Source: Hausman and Wieland, “Overcoming the Lost Decades?”

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Why Hasn’t Inflation Risen to 2%?

  • Lack of credibility?
  • A “timidity trap”? (Krugman)
  • Other?