When was the new Monetary policy system introduced
in 1997 by the Labour party
What is the role of the government in the new system
The government sets an symmetrical inflation target, meaning it is as bad to undershoot as t overshoot. Currently this is 2%
What is the role of the bank in the new system
The bank sets interest rates independently with the aim of achieving the governments target
How does the Bank operate interest rates
Through a Monetary Policy Committee, who meet 8 times a year
How many members does the MPC have
9 members who each have 1 vote
This comprises of 5 Bank officials and 4 outside experts (who are appointed for 3 year terms)
What report does the MPC produce
A quarterly report called the Monetary policy report, which describes the state of the economy and explains its conduct of monetary policy
What does the MPC do if they miss the target of 2%
When the inflation rate deviates due to a supply side shock, the Bank can use its judgement to decide how quickly to get back to 2%. Generally, they would try get back within 2 years, which it calls the medium-term
How does the MPC determine the output gap of the economy
This is how they judge future demand-pull inflation
How does analyse future cost-push inflation
Why does the MPC look at the medium term for inflation caused by supply side shocks
Supply side shocks cause both loss in GDP and inflation, and Bank can’t fix both of these at the same time with interest rates.
Therefore, they first reduce interest rates to boost growth as long as inflationary pressure will go within 2 years
How does the MPC know that inflation will drop back down in the medium term
Because inflation is the annual rate of change of GPL so if GPL rises for a year and then stays constant for a year inflation will rise at first and then become 0
Therefore, if the supply side shock will only have a short term impact, the bank can lower interest rates with the confidence that they will fall in the medium term
What is the transmission mechanism
The term used to describe the routes by which monetary policy affects the economy
What are the 4 main impacts of the MPC changing the bank/base rate
1.Influences the rates of interest set by commercial banks (market rates)
2. Affects household wealth by influencing asset prices in housing and stock market
3. Affects the confidence of households/firms
4. Affects the exchange rate
How do changes in interest rates impact market rates
i.e. lower bank rate means generally lower interest rates in the economy
How do changes in interest rates impact asset prices
and vice versa
How do changes in interest rates impact expectations/confidence
Lower interest rate means households and firms are more confident about future economic growth
How do changes in interest rates impact the exchange rate
What is the key evaluation point when discussing monetary policy in the exam
Time lags:
- Economists think it takes about 18-24 months for a change in the bank rate to impact inflation.
- This is also why the MPC looks at the medium term when making decisions
What is an example of a recent cut in interest rates by the MPC
Interest rates were cut from 5.25% to 0.5% in 2009 after the financial crisis
What are the ways that consumption is affected due changes in the bank rate rate
Explain the effects of lower loan and mortgage costs on consumption due a lower bank rate rate
Means more disposable income available to spend as less is spent on borrowing so marginal propensity to consume rises
However, mortgage doesn’t fall for a fixed mortgage
Explain the changes to the consumption vs saving opportunity cost due a lower bank rate rate
Economist believe the positive substitution effect outweighs the negative income effect so consumption increases
Explain how consumption is affected by increased value of asset prices caused by lower interest rates
Explain how consumption is affected by increased growth expectations caused by lower interest rates
Means consumers are more confident about future job security, so willing to take more risk such as consumption