1 CENTRAL BANK OF CHILE Rodrigo Valdés (with José de Gregorio and Andrea Tokman) IADB - MAY 13, 2005 Flexible Exchange Rates with Inflation Targeting in.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
1 Central Bank Macroeconomic Modeling Workshop Jerusalem, October 2009 Discussion on Financial Shocks and Optimal Monetary Policy in Small Open Economies.
Advertisements

M ACROECONOMIC C HALLENGES IN F RONTIER AND E MERGING M ARKET E CONOMIES José De Gregorio Universidad de Chile Peterson Institute for International Economics.
Crisis Averted—What’s Next? Rodrigo Valdés Western Hemisphere Department International Monetary Fund 22 October 2009.
Challenges for the Central Bank in exerting influence on short-term interest rates (the case of Ukraine) Volodymyr Lepushynskyy National Bank of Ukraine.
Monetary Policy Issues in Israel
Inflation Targeting at 20: Achievements and Challenges By Scott Roger IMF Prepared for the 6 th Norges Bank Monetary Policy Conference Oslo, June.
F OREIGN R ESERVE A CCUMULATION October 20, 2006 Manuel Ramos Francia T HE M EXICAN E XPERIENCE.
Adopting inflation targeting in Albania Bank of Albania July, 2004.
The conduct and instruments of monetary policy June 2005.
WHAT HAVE WE LEARNED FROM RECENT FINANCIAL CRISES IN EMERGING COUNTRIES? José Viñals Banco de España Rome, July 23 rd 2004.
Monetary Policy in the US and Exchange Rate Management: The Chilean Experience and More José De Gregorio Vice Governor Central Bank of Chile May 18, 2007.
Exchange Rate Regimes and the Euro MBA W7 Professor Dermot McAleese.
MEP 1 - Structural Macroeconomic Model for Chile: An Overview Rodrigo Valdés Central Bank of Chile Prepared for the Conference “Monetary Policy: Shocks.
China’s Exchange Rate System after WTO Accession: Some Considerations Jian-Guang Shen, Bank of Finland Institute for Economies in Transition.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 14 Stabilization Policy in the Closed and Open Economy.
The Argentinean and Chilean experience. Pre-crisis developments Low interest rates in the United States in the early 1990s certainly provided an initial.
Monetary Policy Econ  Key player in the financial markets: CENTRAL BANKS: Every sovereign nation has a bank which is the ‘lender of the last.
Macroeconomic Policy and Economic Performance: Chile’s Recent Experience Luis F. Céspedes Ministry of Finance-Chile.
`` Presentation to the OECD policy Seminar: How to reduce debt costs in Southern Africa, Paris, 7 October 2004 Monetary Policy, Real Interest Rates and.
1 Rules in the Conduct of Swiss Monetary Policy May 5 and 6, 2003 Rules in the Conduct of Swiss Monetary Policy Norges Bank Workshop May 5 and 6, 2003.
Exchange Rate Policies in Latin America: Discussion Roberto Chang Rutgers University and NBER.
Economic and financial challenges: prospects of Albania. Ardian Fullani Governor of Bank of Albania Athens October 2009.
Exchange Rate Regimes Lecture 2 IME LIUC 2010.
Dollarization and Crises: Ways In and Out Alejandro Izquierdo De-dollarization Strategies and Domestic Currency Debt Markets in Emerging Economies Okinawa,
Exchange rates and exchange rate regimes International Finance
Currency Crises and Monetary Policy: A Study on Advanced and Emerging Economies Sylvester Eijffinger and Bilge Karatas Tilburg University CIGI, VERC and.
Monetary Policy in Colombia Hernando Vargas Banco de la República April 2005.
Eesti Pank Bank of Estonia 15 years of currency board in Estonia Ülo Kaasik.
Fixed and Floating Exchange Rates
The Future of Central Banking By C.A.E. Goodhart Financial Markets Group London School of Economics Introduction There are three main aspects of stability.
THE CENTRAL BANK & THE ECONOMY Policymakers Model of the Economy.
1 Monetary Policy in Emerging Markets: Key Current IT Themes Leonardo Leiderman Tel-Aviv University OECD and CCBS/Bank.
XII. Keynesian stabilization in an open economy. XII.1 Aggregate demand in the short run.
Challenges for Inflation Targeting in EM in View of the Current Global Crisis by Leonardo Leiderman Berglas School of Economics, Tel-Aviv University, Israel.
Monetary Policy Update April Lower repo rate necessary to subdue the fall in production and employment and to attain the inflation target of two.
Copyright  2011 Pearson Canada Inc Chapter 18 What Should Central Banks Do? Monetary Policy Goals, Strategy and Tactics.
NS3040 Winter Term 2015 Latin American Challenges.
Chapter 15 Policy Coordination, Monetary Union, and Target Zones INTERNATIONAL MONETARY AND FINANCIAL ECONOMICS Third Edition Joseph P. Daniels David D.
Inflation Targeting in Emerging Market Economies Arminio Fraga Ilan Goldfajn André Minella Preliminary Version April 2003 Comments are Welcome.
Exchange rate regimes Many countries have some control on the exchange rate Completely flexible exchange rates would means that the rate is left to the.
Money and Banking Lecture 45. Review of the Previous Lecture Long-run Aggregate Supply Curve Equilibrium and Determination of Output and Inflation Impact.
Chile: Macroeconomic Outlook (and Tremors) Rodrigo Valdés Central Bank of Chile.
One Year of Inflation Targeting in Brazil Marvin Goodfriend Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond Central Bank of Brazil Rio de Janeiro July 10-11, 2000.
MONETARY POLICY. W HAT IS M ONETARY P OLICY Lending by the financial sector allows consumption and investment in an economy to occur without having to.
The Case for Exchange Rate Flexibility: The Chilean Experience José De Gregorio Banco Central de Chile November 2003.
May 2008Gunther Schnabl, Leipzig University & CESIfo1 Exchange Rate Stabilization and Growth in Small Open Economies at the EMU Periphery Gunther Schnabl.
Exchange Rate Policy and Inflation Targeting in Colombia Hernando Vargas Banco de la República May 2005.
1 Monetary Policy in Hungary Changing framework of monetary policy –New law on central bank –Shift of the exchange rate regime –Inflation targeting.
Research Priorities at Bank of Canada: Opportunities for Collaboration Lawrence Schembri International Department Bank of Canada December 2006 The MIT.
Monetary Policy Econ  Key player in the financial markets: CENTRAL BANKS: Every sovereign nation has a bank which is the ‘lender of the last.
1 April 2001 Banco Central do Brasil The Case of Brazil The Case of Brazil The Managed Floaters: Float or Sink? Float! Float! Ilan Goldfajn.
Slovak Brief Experience with Euro during Global Recession Ján Tóth Deputy Governor National Bank of Slovakia.
1 Afonso Bevilaqua December 2003 Reducing Public Sector’s FX Exposure: The Brazilian Experience.
Chapter 29: Monetary Policy in Canada Copyright © 2014 Pearson Canada Inc.
Redemption Through Indexation: The Chilean Experience Rodrigo Valdés Central Bank of Chile IADB Conference - November 2002.
Introduction to a Small Macro Model Jaromir Hurnik Monetary Policy and Business Cycle April 2009.
14 INTERNATIONAL MACROECONOMICS Macroeconomics Curtis, Irvine © 2013.
Policy Responses to Sudden Stops in Capital Flows: The Case of Chile in 1998 Rodrigo Valdés Central Bank of Chile.
Government Influence On Exchange Rates
NEW FINANCIAL ARCHITECTURE AND MACRO POLICY UNDER GLOBALIZATION HAZARD
Chapter 9 The Balance of Payments and Exchange Rates
16 questions on monetary policy asked by Professor Alan Blinder 15th Vice Chairman of the Federal Reserve In office: Jan 31,1996-Feb 1, 2006 Today: Princeton.
Redemption Through Indexation: The Chilean Experience
RMB Exchange Rate and Internationalization
Unit 8: International Trade & Finance
NS4540 Winter Term 2016 Latin American Challenges
FX Interventions and Inflation Targeting
Economic and financial challenges: prospects of Albania.
NS4540 Winter Term 2019 Latin American Challenges
Presentation transcript:

1 CENTRAL BANK OF CHILE Rodrigo Valdés (with José de Gregorio and Andrea Tokman) IADB - MAY 13, 2005 Flexible Exchange Rates with Inflation Targeting in Chile: Experience and Issues

2 Agenda 1.The road to a flex ER regime in Chile 2.The current policy framework  Description  Brief evaluation 3.The ER and the framework at work 4.Issues  Volatility and hedging  Extreme valuations  Passthrough 5.Concluding remarks

3 1. The Road to a Flexible ER Regime in Chile

4 Road to Flex ER Problems with ER inflexibility. Crises in 1962 and 1982 with fixed ER. Recession after Asian crisis and ER band ER band suffered multiple adjustments affecting its credibility; ER usually near low limit Fear of floating in 1998 due to: –Passthrough in overheated economy and large CA deficit –Mismatches Capital controls during the 90s –Useful? Not central; ER regime more problematic –Dismantled after the crisis

5 N F O R M E The Road to Flex Source: Central Bank of Chile Exchange Rate and Band: (pesos per US$)

6 N F O R M E The Road to Flex Source: Central Bank of Chile Real Exchange Rate: (up is peso depreciation)

7 2. The Current Framework: FFIT + Flex ER I N F O R M E D E P O L Í T I C A M O N E T A R I A

8 The Current Framework Since 2000 IT with a 2 to 4% band, centered in 3% for CPI with policy horizon of months ( “infant stage” IT with annual targets before) Forward-looking nature and band accommodates –MP lags –Unnecessary output volatility No contingencies announced Headline CPI, but core measures used to evaluate, forecast and communicate

9 The Current Framework In practice, month forecasts are the operational objective Standard instruments to communicate MP: –Monetary Policy Report –Communiqués –MP meeting minutes Floating ER regime, but CB reserves the right to intervene in exceptional circumstances –Overreaction with negative consequences –Transparency

10 The Current Framework Has served well the economy... From gradual decline in inflation in the 90s to –Average 2.7% since 2000, max 4.7%, min -0.7% –2/3 of the time within the band Powerful anchor for medium term expected inflation MP has been strongly countercyclical –More than in the 90s RER adjustment to negative shocks in 2001 and 2002

11 N F O R M E The Current Framework Source: Central Bank of Chile CPI Inflation and Inflation Target: (percentage)

12 N F O R M E The Current Framework Source: Central Bank of Chile Expected Inflation Measures (percentage)

13 N F O R M E The Current Framework Source: Central Bank of Chile Countercyclical MP under IT

14 N F O R M E The Current Framework Source: Central Bank of Chile RER Adjustment and External Conditions

15 3. The ER and the Framework at Work

16 ER and the Framework at Work MP reaction to ER is not mechanic; the nature of the shock matters –Expected path of the ER UIP enhanced with equilibrium RER discussion –Effect on inflation Direct and indirect effects Core model: passthrough 20% in one year; 25 in two years Examples: –End 2003 appreciation followed by interest rate cuts –Mid 2002 depreciation together with interest rate cuts

17 ER and the Framework at Work Two intervention episodes (2001 and 2002) Why? –Probable overreaction with inflation (and MP) consequences –Informed call by CB board Fixed period (4 months), maximum amounts (US$ 4 bn) Large effects on announcement (including trend) Actual interventions used a portion of resources

18 N F O R M E ER and the Framework at Work Source: Central Bank of Chile Exchange Rate Interventions

19 4. Issues

20 N F O R M E Issues: Volatility Source: Central Bank of Chile Exchange Rate Volatility (30-day standard deviation of daily averages)

21 N F O R M E Issues: Volatility Source: Riskmetrics Exchange Rate Volatility

22 N F O R M E Issues: Hedging FX Derivatives Market in Chile

23 N F O R M E Issues: Hedging Source: BIS FX Market Turnover/GDP, April 2004

24 N F O R M E Issues: Extreme Valuations Source: Author’s calculations

25 N F O R M E Issues: Extreme Valuations Source: Author’s calculations Sq. Root Quadratic Misalignment and ER Regime (5-year averages)

26 N F O R M E Issues: Passthrough Source: Author’s calculations One-year Passthrough Coefficient

27 5. Concluding Remarks

28 Concluding Remarks Framework has worked well… –Inflation under control and countercyclical MP –RER has adjusted substantially and there is more stability (with other developments, e.g. fiscal policy) Volatility has increased (as elsewhere?) –There is more hedging in deeper markets –Extreme valuations seem less likely Is the model a blueprint for everybody? –Institutions needed for benefits of financial opening –Overcoming fear of floating needs credible anti-inflation stance and limited balance sheet effects