Meyer’s
MPI The Global Outlook & Challenges for Monetary Policy Global Issues and the U.S. Outlook Global Interdependence Center April 14, 2004 Laurence H. Meyer Senior Adviser, Macroeconomic Advisers
Outline
Meyer’s
MPI
• New and Old Challenges for Monetary Policy • Global Outlook Themes • Global Influences on the U.S. Outlook • Country/Regional Developments • Challenges to Monetary Policy
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Global Disinflation & the Great Moderation US Consumer Price Index and Trade-Weighted Foreign Consumer Price Index 16
Meyer’s
MPI
Percent H F
Foreign
14 12 10 8 6
US
4 2 0 84
86
m Macroeconomic Advisers, LLC
88
90
92
94
96
www.meyersmpi.com
98
00
02
04 3
Global trend to Higher Interest Rates
Meyer’s
US 10-year Treasury Yield Trade-Weighted Foreign Government Bond Yield 14
MPI
Percent H F
12 10 8 10-year
6 Foreign
4 2 84
86
m Macroeconomic Advisers, LLC
88
90
92
94
96
www.meyersmpi.com
98
00
02
04 4
U.S. and Foreign Real GDP Growth
Meyer’s
US GDP Growth and Trade-weighted Foreign GDP Growth 6
MPI
4-quarter growth, percent
5
United States
Foreign World
4 3 2 1 0 H
F
-1 1999 m Macroeconomic Advisers, LLC
2000
2001
2002
2003
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2004
2005 5
Global Issues
• • • • • • • • •
Meyer’s
MPI
Synchronous global recovery Initial conditions: low nominal, real rates and inflation Little scope for monetary/fiscal stimulus Diversity in challenges facing central banks Adjustment of global imbalances/an asymmetry Cyclical rebounds vs structural considerations Common transitions: fiscal consolidation/global aging China & India: threat or opportunity/managing success Geopolitical uncertainty and terrorism
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6
The U.S. Current Account Deficit
Meyer’s
Net Exports and Real Trade-Weighted Foreign Exchange Rate 120
1997=100
Billions of US $
-320
115
-360
110
-400
105 100
-440
Real Trade-Weighted 35-Country Foreign Exchange Rate
95
MPI
-480 -520
Net Exports H
F
90
-560 2000
2001
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2002
2003
2004
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2005
7
Adjustment of Global Imbalances
• U.S. current account deficit part of the global imbalance – – – –
Meyer’s
MPI
More difficult for us or our counterparties? Gradual or chaotic? Sooner or later? Narrowly or more broadly based?
• Implications of Asian accumulation of $s – – – –
Transition from private demand to official accumulation Reduces breadth and overall amount of adjustment Reduces immediate need for adjustment Course of adjustment now depends on policy considerations
• Challenges – – – –
High U.S. import elasticity and initial conditions Difficult to make adjustment unless ROW grows faster than U.S. Japan, Euro area addicted to external demand Difficult to be successful unless U.S. raises national saving
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Depreciation and U.S. Net Exports
Meyer’s
Net Exports and Trade-Weighted Foreign Exchange Rate 135
1997=100
Billions of US dollars
-320
130
-360
125
-400
120
-440
115
Trade-W eighted 35-Country Foreign Exchange Rate
MPI
-480
110
-520 net exports H
105 2000
2001
m Macroeconomic Advisers, LLC
2002
2003
F
2004
www.meyersmpi.com
-560 2005 9
The Global Rebound and Commodity Prices
Crude Core PPI 30
Meyer’s
MPI
12-month percent change
20 10 0 -10 -20 1990
1992
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1994
1996
1998
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2000
2002 10
Higher Oil Prices
Meyer’s
MPI
West Texas Intermediate 40
US Dollars
36 32 28 24 20 16 2000 m Macroeconomic Advisers, LLC
2001
2002
www.meyersmpi.com
2003 11
How Much Pass-Through to Import Prices? Nonpetroleum Import Prices 8
Meyer’s
MPI
3-month percentage change, annualized
4 0 -4 -8 -12 2000 m Macroeconomic Advisers, LLC
2001
2002
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2003 12
Country/regional Issues
Meyer’s
MPI
• U.S.: productivity, employment and monetary policy • Japan: finally a breakout and if so, why? • Is China overheating and if so, hard or soft landing? • Euro area: destined and content to under perform?
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Productivity Growth: How much will it slow?
Productivity Growth 6
Meyer’s
MPI
percent H F 1-year
5 4
5-year
3 2 1 96
97
m Macroeconomic Advisers, LLC
98
99
00
01
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02
03
04
05 14
Aggregate Demand vs. Productivity Growth GDP Growth and Productivity Growth 10
Meyer’s
MPI
percent
8 GDP
Productivity 6 4 2 0 -2 2000
2001
m Macroeconomic Advisers, LLC
2002
2003
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2004
2005 15
What Drives Monetary Policy? The Unemployment Rate and Core Inflation in the Forecast 10
Meyer’s
MPI
percent H F
8 unemployment rate
6 4
core CPI
2 0 1-quarter GDP growth
-2
2000 2001 2001 2002 2002 2003 2003 2004 2004 2005 2005 2000
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16
Real GDP Growth and Inflation in Japan Japan Real GDP and Consumer Prices 5
Meyer’s
MPI H
F
Percent
4
Real GDP
3 2 1 0 -1
consumer prices
-2 -3
H
F
-4 95
96
m Macroeconomic Advisers, LLC
97
98
99
00
01
www.meyersmpi.com
02
03
04
05 17
Real GDP Growth and Inflation in Euro Area Eurozone Real GDP and Consumer Prices 5
H
Meyer’s
MPI F
Percent
H
F
4 Real GDP
3 Consumer Prices
2 1 0 95
96
m Macroeconomic Advisers, LLC
97
98
99
00
01
www.meyersmpi.com
02
03
04
05 18
China and India
Meyer’s
MPI
China and India Growth of Real GDP 12
Percent
India
China
10 8 6 4
H
F
2 95
96
m Macroeconomic Advisers, LLC
97
98
99
00
01
www.meyersmpi.com
02
03
04
05 19
Real GDP Growth and Inflation in China
Meyer’s
MPI
China Real GDP and Consumer Prices 25
H
F
Percent
20 Consumer prices
15 10
Real GDP
5 0 H
F
-5 95
96
m Macroeconomic Advisers, LLC
97
98
99
00
01
www.meyersmpi.com
02
03
04
05 20
Change in Chinese Exchange Rate Regime?
• U.S., Euro, Asian, and Chinese perspectives
Meyer’s
MPI
• Sequencing and the reluctance to float • Consistency with domestic policy objectives • Intermediate steps – – – –
Widening the band Discrete revaluation Moving to a market basket Partial and gradual relaxation of capital controls
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The Outsourcing Debate
• The magnitude of the problem?
Meyer’s
MPI
• Bearing backlash to globalization, productivity • Widening job insecurity related to globalization • Winners and losers and the Pareto principle • Reducing the gains from trade? • The policy response m Macroeconomic Advisers, LLC
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22
Monetary Policy around the World
• Exit problems and return to neutrality
Meyer’s
MPI
• Learning about nonconventional policy (Japan) • Structural constraints (Euro area and Japan) • Productivity and monetary policy (U.S.) • Transparency and inflation targets • Monetary policy and bubbles m Macroeconomic Advisers, LLC
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Monetary Policy in the U.S.: Sooner or Later
•Return to neutrality:
Meyer’s
MPI
– What is the neutral value of the funds rate? – What is the implicit inflation target and what is the NAIRU? – Timing of the start of tightening • Preconditions and triggers • Higher hurdle for first move and never surprise the market • Should the Fed still “err on the side of ease?” • The two gaps story: how far from full employment & neutrality? • Accelerators: role of equity valuations, term and risk spreads • Patiently preemptive? • Does the election influence the timing of tightening? – The pace of tightening and interaction with timing (via Greg Ip) • “Baby Steps”: Start early and move slowly • “Backloading”: Start later and then converge more quickly • “Late and Leisurely”: Start later and move slowly m Macroeconomic Advisers, LLC
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Sooner or Later
Meyer’s
• Later – Slow decline in unemployment rate, stable core inflation – Concern about inflection point/2nd half slowdown – Limited concerns with financial imbalances as accelerator – Maximin and comfort in still erring on side of ease
MPI
• Sooner – Faster decline in unemployment rate/upward rend in core inflation – Two gaps: not so far from potential/long way to neutrality – Reluctance to continue erring on side of ease – Preference for gradualism
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The Taylor Rule and the MPI Call
Meyer’s
MPI
Taylor Rule Using Short-Run NAIRU 10
H F Prescribed
8 6 4 Actual, Forecast Actual, MPI MA Forecast
2 0 88
90
m Macroeconomic Advisers, LLC
92
94
96
98
www.meyersmpi.com
00
02
04 26
Evolution of Monetary Policy in Japan
• February 1999: zero rate policy
Meyer’s
MPI
• April 1999: first statement re precommitment – “until deflationary concerns dispelled”
• August 2000: terminated ZRP/raised policy rate ¼ pp • February 2001: returned to (near) zero policy rate • March 2001: adopted “quantitative easing” – Targeting current account balance at BOJ – Clarified precommitment: until CPI inflation stable at zero or above m Macroeconomic Advisers, LLC
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Effectiveness of Nonconventional policy
Meyer’s
MPI
• Limits to monetary policy: broken multiplier • Quantitative easing • Precommitment • Improving the transmission mechanism
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28
ECB
Meyer’s
MPI
• Differences in objective conditions or strategy? • Dismissive of “stabilization policy” • Asymmetric re response to inflation • Limits on monetary policy/structural constraints
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29
Inflation Targets and Inflation Targeting
• • • • • • • •
Meyer’s
MPI
Trend toward inflation targeting U.S. and Japan: do not have explicit targets Exit issue: what is the “implicit” inflation objective Price stability vs. price stability + cushion Transparency, accountability, and effectiveness Hierarchical vs. dual mandates Trade-off between inflation target & flexibility? Explicit inflation objective within dual mandate
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Monetary Policy and Asset Bubbles
• Lessons from equity bubble:
Meyer’s
MPI
– Difficult to reach timely judgment about danger of bubble – Indirect vs. direct approaches – In close call, encourages tighter policy
• Today concerns with housing bubbles in UK, Australia – Contributed at margin to decisions to tighten
• U.S. – Some talk about bond market bubble – Reaching for yield across term and risk structure – Increases exit problem
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