Essays on Unconventional Monetary Policy


Book Description

Following the Global Financial Crisis of 2007 { 2010, central banks around the world were forced into unprecedented policy interventions to stabilise asset markets and prevent the global nancial system from collapsing. Because interest rates around the world were at historical lows, \conventional" interest rate policy was not an option. Central banks, led by the US Federal Reserve, resorted to \unconventional" monetary policies, rst to stabilise markets during the height of the crisis, and then to support the economic recovery thereafter. The distinguishing characteristic of these unconventional policies was that they involved direct intervention by central banks in long-term xed income markets, such as government bonds and agency debt. This thesis considers the theoretical channels through which central bank purchases of long-term securities could impact (i) bond yields, (ii) other domestic asset markets, and (iii) spillovers to foreign countries. The theory is then tested and evaluated against the empirical evidence. Based on the empirical results, a simple closed-economy DSGE model is constructed. The model captures and illustrates the transmission from central bank asset purchase shocks to the aggregate economy. The asset purchase shock is subsequently converted to an endogenous balance sheet rule. Simulations show that combining this unconventional (balance sheet) rule with a conventional (short-term interest rate) rule yields a superior policy mix than under the conventional rule alone. Finally, the closed-economy model is extended to an open-economy framework, within which a similar balance sheet rule is evaluated in the context of international capital ows. Again, the combination of the balance sheet and interest rate policy is found to yield a superior outcome than interest rate policy alone. The contribution of this thesis is twofold. It contributes to the understanding of the impact of central bank interventions in xed income markets on long-term yields, as well as the externalities and spillovers to other asset markets. Furthermore, this thesis develops a robust and versatile framework, which is intuitively easy to grasp, within which various aspects of central bank balance sheet policy could be investigated. This thesis' main conclusion is that unconventional monetary policy could complement conventional policy under normal market conditions, and that unconventional policy need not be restricted to crisis times only







Essays on Unconventional Monetary Policy


Book Description

This dissertation is comprised of three essays in which we provide a theoretical framework to study the transmission mechanism of unconventional monetary policy on real activity and credit markets under differing degrees of banking sector concentration. In particular, the three chapters in this dissertation focus on expansionary balance sheet policies consisting of long-term asset purchases by a central bank. The overall results indicate that such expansionary policies stimulate economic activity in the form of capital formation, increased credit volume and financial easing under low short-term interest rate economies when the financial sector is perfectly competitive. However, when the banking sector is fully concentrated, the transmission mechanism of monetary policy can be distorted and thus the impact of a long-term security purchase program is hampered. Our results also suggest that the fiscal authority as well as the industrial organization of the banking sector play fundamental roles in the transmission mechanism of unconventional monetary policy.







Essays on Unconventional Monetary Policies


Book Description

The three chapters in this dissertation analyze the unconventional monetary policy tools that were utilized in response to the global financial crisis of 2007-2009. Chapter 1 examines the degree of misspecification in a mainstream DSGE model with unconventional monetary policy using the DSGE-VAR approach. The findings indicate that this type of model exhibits a high level of misspecification. For instance, estimation results point to the data favoring an unrestricted vector autoregression model over a DSGE model with unconventional monetary policy. Thus, policymakers should exercise caution when using new macroeconomic models that incorporate unconventional monetary policy. Chapter 2 examines the link between expectations formation and the effectiveness of central bank forward guidance. In a standard New Keynesian model, agents form expectations about future macroeconomic variables via either the standard rational expectations hypothesis or a more plausible theory of expectations formation called adaptive learning. The results show that the efficacy of forward guidance depends on the manner in which agents form their expectations. During an economic crisis (e.g. a recession), for example, the assumption of rational expectations overstates the effects of forward guidance relative to adaptive learning. Specifically, the output gap is higher under rational expectations than adaptive learning. Thus, if monetary policy is based on a model with rational expectations, which is the standard assumption in the macroeconomic literature, the results of forward guidance could be potentially misleading. Chapter 3 investigates the effectiveness of forward guidance while relaxing two standard macroeconomic assumptions: rational expectations and frictionless financial markets. A standard DSGE model is extended to include the financial accelerator mechanism. The results show that the addition of financial frictions amplifies the differences between rational expectations and adaptive learning to forward guidance. During a period of economic crisis (e.g. a recession), output under rational expectations displays more favorable responses to forward guidance than under adaptive learning. These differences are exacerbated when compared to a similar analysis without financial frictions. Thus, monetary policymakers should consider the way in which expectations and credit market frictions are modeled when examining the effects of forward guidance.