4.12.3 - Central Banks and Monetary Policy Flashcards
What is a central bank?
A national bank that provides financial and banking services for its country’s government and banking system.
Implements the government’s monetary policy and issuing currency.
What is the UK central bank?
The Bank of England.
When was the BoE nationalised?
1946.
What are the two key functions of a central bank?
- Help the government maintain macroeconomic stability
- Bring about financial stability in the monetary system
What is the governmental inflation target?
2%.
How can the central bank help banks and the financial system?
- Act as a lender of last resort (help banks)
- Monitor and regulate the financial system (regulate the banks)
What are policy objectives?
The target the BoE aims to hit.
What are policy instruments?
The tools the BoE uses to try and achieve policy objectives.
How can policy objectives be divided?
Ultimate and intermediate.
How can policy instruments be divided?
Directly affecting the supply of new deposits or influencing the creation of bank deposits by affecting demand for loans or credit.
What is the monetary policy committee?
The part of the BoE which implements UK monetary policy.
What is the bank rate?
The rate of interest the BoE pays to commercial banks on their deposits at the BoE.
What does monetary policy affect in the AD equation?
- Consumption
- Investment
- Imports
- Exports
How does the BoE decide whether to lower or raise the bank rate?
- Current rate of inflation
- Existence of inflationary / deflationary pressure
- Consumer and business confidence
- Growth rate of the economy
- Levels of employment / unemployment
- etc.
What leeway is the MPC given?
1% above or below the 2% CPI inflation target.
What happens if the CPI inflation rate exceeds the leeway?
The governor of the BoE must write an open letter to the CotE explaining why.
What is the primary objective of the bank? And why are there trade-offs with other goals?
The primary objective is price stability.
The BoE must achieve price stability while supporting the government’s economic policy objectives.
What is contractionary monetary policy?
Uses higher interest rates to decrease AD and shift AD left.
Draw a graph of the effects of contractionary monetary policy.
How can contractionary monetary policy cause a recession?
If the SRAS curve is very steep, real output may fall too far and push the economy in to a recession.
This could be exacerbated by a possible multiplier effect to push the curve further to the left.
How does an increase in interest rates decrease AD?
- Higher interest rates reducing household consumption (C)
- Higher interest rates reducing business investment (I)
- Changes in interest rates affect exports and imports via the exchange rate
How do contractionary interest rates reducing household consumption decrease AD?
Higher interest rates incentivise saving and higher saving means that less income is therefore available to be consumed.
The cost of household borrowing also increases, increasing the cost of servicing a mortgage and credit card debt. Borrowers have less money to spend on consumption because more of their income is being use for interest payments.
The prices of assets may fall, reducing personal wealth and therefore reduces consumption. The falling assets prices also reduce consumer confidence, further deflating consumption.
The opposite is of course true for expansionary interest rates.
How do contractionary interest rates reducing business investment decrease AD?
Businesses will postpone or cancel investment projects because the higher borrowing costs may make the purchase of capital goods unprofitable. This will be exacerabated by falling business confidence.
The opposite is of course true for expansionary interest rates.
How do contractionary interest rates affecting imports and exports via the exchange rate decrease AD?
A higher rate of interest increases the demand for pounds by attracting capital flows into the currency. This causes the pound’s exchange rate to rise, making UK exports less price competitive in world markets and imports more competitive in UK markets. The BoP worsens, and AD falls.
The opposite is of course true for expansionary interest rates.