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MESSAGE TO INFLATION TARGETING CENTRAL BANKS:
SAY WHAT YOU DO AND DO WHAT YOU SAY
Transparency and commitment are essential to any independent and
inflation targeting central bank - and even more so for the European
Central Bank (ECB), which, unlike most central banks, will set both
its goals and the instruments by which it aims to achieve those
goals. That is the message of Professor Mike Artis, Paul Mizen and
Zenon Kontolemis, writing in Novembers Economic Journal. Say
what you do and do what you say, they urge the ECB and other
central banks, whatever the precise objective of your monetary policy
and whatever the chosen target.
Choice of operating target: The ECB seems to have opted for a combination
of monetary targeting and inflation targeting. This contrasts with
pure inflation targeting, the regime that many newly independent
central banks have chosen to operate, including the Bank of England.
Some interpretations of the Bundesbanks policies suggest that
it too is a covert inflation targeter: not only has it delivered
a low inflation outcome, but in justifying uncorrected misses
of its monetary targets, it invariably points to its low inflation
achievements.
Choice of specific inflation target: An important technical issue
for the ECB is the choice of price index to be targeted. The usual
choice has been some version of the consumer price index (CPI),
with the exclusion of lumpy and erratic terms and the deletion of
any component directly reflecting the monetary policy instrument.
Thus, in the UK, the target is the retail price index excluding
mortgage interest payments. Artis et al consider additional exclusions
of erratic items and alternative smoothing methods: choosing the
median not the mean; focusing on a moving average; and extracting
a core component. The key is to avoid making monetary
policy hostage to an erratic, jumpy inflation series; policy should
focus on controlling the underlying rate.
For the ECB, the choice of CPI might not be so obvious. A wholesale
price index (WPI) - which corresponds more closely to traded goods
where the market should ensure the Law of One Price
- might be preferred. This is because a large proportion of any
CPI consists of the prices of non-traded goods and services, which
may evolve in quite different ways across the EMU. However, WPI
inflation is notably more volatile than CPI inflation and, on these
grounds, makes a bad target.
Policy transmission lags and inflation forecasts: A problem with
inflation targeting is that because of the lags in policy transmission
as well as the uncertainties of forecasting, monitoring the central
banks policy is difficult. It has become fashionable to argue
that the intermediate variable of inflation targeting is the inflation
forecast. If the private sectors unconditional
forecasts of inflation (forecasts which allow for the central banks
future policy responses) lie within the target range, the implication
is that the market believes the central bank is doing a good
job. But this means that the bank can learn nothing about
future inflation from the market, and the private sector cannot
provide a professional forecasting standard against which the central
banks predictive competence and policy performance can be
assessed.
It is important that a central banks technical forecasting
expertise is maintained by peer group pressure. These researchers
advocate that, at a minimum, full information about its forecasting
procedures should be made available. Bank of England practice involves
the presentation of forecast inflation fan charts, illustrating
the uncertainties surrounding a forecast. The advance that this
represents is qualified by some doubts as to whether potential users
can handle this type of information efficiently.
Transparency and commitment: The choice of operational strategy
exposes some important issues of transparency and commitment. The
inherent lack of transparency of inflation targets - due to the
lags and forecast uncertainty - has resulted, in practice, in a
compensating supply of information in countries using inflation
targets: minutes of meetings; details of the forecasting process
and the banks reaction function, etc. The Bank of Englands
experience suggests that too much openness is also possible:
the revelations of voting behaviour on the MPC have provided an
unwelcome diversion.
Inflation targeting central banks typically have independence to
use their policy instruments to pursue goals laid down by government:
instrument-independence, but not goal-independence. The ECB has,
by statute, both goal- and instrument-independence. This is perceived
to have two merits: the EMU governments have pre-committed not to
meddle in monetary policy; and the central bank is accountable.
In the European context, the statutes give the ECB a huge degree
of formal independence, but the implicit rules of democratic
governance require it to give an account of itself.
Moreover, the ECB needs a constituency of support to make a strong
and effective bulwark of its formal independence from governments.
It must in some way offer to make itself accountable to the people
of Europe - perhaps in practice to the European Parliament.
Fortunately, inflation targeting as a regime requires many of the
same accoutrements of transparency with which the ECB will probably
need to arm itself.
Note for Editors: Inflation Targeting: What can the ECB Learn
from the Recent Experience of the Bank of England? by Mike Artis,
Paul Mizen and Zenon Kontolemis is in the November 1998 issue of
the Economic Journal. Artis is at the European University Institute;
Mizen at the University of Nottingham; and Kontolemis at the IMF.
For Further information: contact Paul Mizen on 0115-951-5479 (fax:
0115-951-4159; email: paul.mizen@nottingham.ac.uk); or RES Media
Consultant Rom
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