Inflation targeting.
Bernanke, Ben
Undoubtedly the most interesting development in monetary policy in
recent years is the widespread adoption by central banks of a policy
framework called "inflation targeting." As the name suggests,
this approach is characterized by the announcement of official inflation
targets at one or more horizons, and by the explicit acknowledgment that
low and stable inflation is the overriding long-term objective of
monetary policy. In practice, other important features of inflation
targeting include greater "transparency" of policy - that is,
increased communication and clarity about the plans and objectives of
monetary policymakers - and, in some cases, increased accountability of
the central bank for attaining its announced objectives.
New Zealand and Canada were pioneers of the inflation targeting
approach; although, as I discuss later, the monetary policy strategies
of Germany and Switzerland were important precursors. Other countries
that have officially adopted inflation targeting include Australia,
Finland, Israel, Japan, Spain, Sweden, and the United Kingdom. Some
developing countries, Chile being a leading example, use modified
versions of this strategy. The United States has declined to adopt
inflation targeting formally, although the focus of the Federal Reserve
Board under Alan Greenspan on maintaining low inflation (including the
use of pre-emptive strikes against possible future inflation)
incorporates elements of this approach. Finally, the new European
Central Bank is likely to adopt a modified form of inflation targeting,
although political considerations (the need to demonstrate continuity
with the policies of the Bundesbank) apparently will dictate that the
ECB pay attention to monetary aggregates as well.
In light of the interest in and increasing application of inflation
targeting, it is important to understand its potential strengths and
weaknesses. My recent research has focused on the historical record of
inflation targeting and the potential pitfalls for inflation targeters
that are suggested by economic theory.(1)
The Bundesbank as Inflation Targeter
One barrier to empirically assessing inflation targeting is its
short historical record: New Zealand, the first formal inflation
targeter, adopted the approach only in 1990. In searching for relevant
experiences, the student of inflation targeting is tempted to look to
the post-1975 monetary policy regimes of Germany and Switzerland.
Although both the Bundesbank and the Swiss National Bank refer to their
approaches as "money targeting" rather than inflation
targeting, there is a widespread perception that inflation targets are
central to German and Swiss monetary policymaking. For example, the
Bundesbank develops its money targets by starting with an inflation
objective, then working backward to determine the rate of money growth
that is consistent with that objective.
Ilian Mihov and I have analyzed the role of inflation targets in
the Bundesbank's policymaking.(2) We ask the following question:
Suppose that, after setting its money targets for the year, the
Bundesbank were to observe higher money growth than the target; but
because of offsetting factors, there is no accompanying change in its
inflation forecast. Would the Bundesbank tighten policy? If it did not,
then it seems reasonable to conclude that the Bundesbank is basically an
inflation targeter. If it did tighten policy, particularly if it
tightened enough to return money to its target path, then the Bundesbank
would be better characterized as a money targeter, albeit one for which
inflation goals remain important.
Anecdotally, there appear to have been numerous episodes in which
the Bundesbank ignored its money targets to try to meet more fundamental
objectives of policy, notably its inflation goals. To test this
proposition more formally, however, we need a quantitative indicator of
what it means to tighten or loosen policy. To that end, Mihov and I
apply a method that we developed in an earlier study of monetary policy
in the United States.(3) Our approach is to estimate a model of the
central bank's operating procedure. With this estimate in hand, we
can infer which variables under the control of the central bank are the
best indicators of policy stance at a given time. Specifically, among
candidate indicators such as various short-term interest rates or
measures of bank reserves, we can determine which indicators (or
combinations of indicators) have the highest correlation with shocks to
policy (and, accordingly, a low correlation with endogenous factors like
changes in the demand for reserves). For the case of the Bundesbank, our
estimates suggest that the Lombard rate (a rate analogous to the
discount rate in the United States) is a marginally better indicator of
policy than the call rate, a short-term rate that has been used often as
a policy indicator in previous studies.
Our formal test of whether the Bundesbank targets money therefore
amounts to checking whether shocks to the expected evolution of the
money stock affect the setting of the Lombard rate, holding fixed the
forecast of inflation. We find that, at medium-term and longer horizons,
forecasted inflation explains a much greater share of the variance in
the Lombard rate than does forecasted money growth (or, for that matter,
than do forecasted changes in output, or in the value of the deutsche
mark). In this important respect, at least, the Bundesbank seems closer
to being an inflation targeter than a money targeter.
If we provisionally treat Germany (and possibly Switzerland, which
follows a similar approach) as an inflation targeter, what lessons do we
learn? Over the much longer period of its operation, the German approach
to monetary policy has achieved results that are quite similar to what
has been seen in the shorter experiences of formal inflation targeters.
On the plus side, Germany has maintained low and stable inflation, and
the central bank has high credibility. In particular, the public's
confidence in the Bundesbank's commitment to low inflation has
allowed it the flexibility to pursue short-term objectives, such as
stabilization of output or the exchange rate, without increasing the
inflation expectations of the public. On the other hand, there is no
evidence that the use of inflation targeting has allowed Germany or any
other country to reduce significantly the output costs of disinflation.
Inflation Targeting in Practice: A Case Study Approach
Inflation targeting regimes differ along many dimensions that are
hard to quantify, such as details of implementation, the channels by
which the central bank communicates with the public and the government,
who is responsible for achieving inflation objectives, and the relevance
of political and institutional factors. These qualitative issues,
together with the relatively short history of most inflation targeting
regimes, suggest that case studies may be a useful supplement to more
conventional analysis for learning about the inflation targeting
approach.
Together with Thomas Laubach, Frederic Mishkin, and Adam Posen, I
have undertaken detailed case studies of the experiences of all major
inflation targeting countries, to be reported in our recently published
book.(4) My co-authors and I conducted historical studies of post-1975
monetary policy regimes in Germany and Switzerland (the precursors to
inflation targeting), and of the recent policy regimes in New Zealand,
Canada, the United Kingdom, Sweden, Israel, Australia, and Spain. The
case studies are reported in a parallel form: each begins with an
account of the adoption of inflation targeting in the country, followed
by a discussion of the operational framework employed by the central
bank, and then a narrative description of policymaking and economic
events under the inflation-targeting regime. The case studies are
supplemented by econometric analyses.
Perhaps the most important conclusion from the case studies is that
it is fundamentally incorrect to characterize inflation targeting (as
conducted in practice) as an ironclad policy rule, in the sense of the
traditional rules-versus-discretion debate. Instead, inflation targeting
is better thought of as a policy framework, in which policy is
"tied down" in the long run by the inflation target (which
serves as a nominal anchor for the system), but in which there is also
considerable leeway for policymakers to pursue other objectives in the
short run. In particular, adoption of inflation targeting does not
amount to abandoning output stabilization. First, inflation targeting,
even in the short run, is consistent with stabilizing output against
aggregate demand shocks. Second, supply shocks can be handled within the
inflation targeting framework by various mechanisms, such as the
exclusion of volatile components from the targeted price index or
lengthening the period over which the inflation target is to be reached.
Finally, as noted, inflation targeting permits a degree of policy
discretion in the short run, allowing the central bank to respond to
current economic developments, so long as the long-run inflation goal is
not compromised.
Achieving a degree of short-run flexibility for policy requires
that the public's expectations of inflation remain stable in the
face of short-term fluctuations in policy and the economy. In other
words, the medium- and long-term inflation goals of the central bank
must be reasonably credible. In practice, inflation-targeting central
banks have sought to strengthen their credibility by taking measures to
increase transparency and accountability. Transparency requires that
policymakers' objectives, information, and plans be communicated
clearly and in a regular and timely fashion to the government and the
public. All inflation targeting central banks have taken substantial
steps toward openness in policymaking, for example through regular
publication of inflation reports that include detailed information on
inflation prospects and likely policy responses. Accountability requires
at a minimum that the central bank stake its reputation on either
meeting its inflation targets or in providing clear and compelling
reasons for why the target was missed. Mechanisms for increasing
accountability range from New Zealand's provision (not exercised
thus far) for dismissing the central bank governor if the inflation
target range is breached, to the common requirement of regular reporting
by the central bank to parliament.
The record of inflation targeting is good, albeit short at this
point. There is strong evidence that inflation and inflation
expectations have both fallen and become more stable in inflation
targeting countries. In particular, it appears that inflation, once
down, stays down; there is less tendency for inflation to rise during
business cycle expansions. Low and stable inflation should promote
growth and output stability in the long run. However, as already noted,
the hope that inflation targeting might reduce the output costs of an
initial disinflation does not appear to have been borne out.
Inflation Forecasts and Monetary Policy
Some critics of inflation targeting have argued that the approach
is not operational because of the time that it takes monetary policy
actions to affect inflation, as well as the difficulties of forecasting
inflation. These problems are cited as reasons for policy to target
money, exchange rates, or some other variable that can be more directly
controlled than prices.
This argument suffers from logical problems. Either intermediate
targets like money and exchange rates bear a stable relationship to
long-run objectives like inflation or they do not. If they do, then they
can be used, along with other information, to target long-run inflation.
(Indeed, as Lars Svensson emphasized,(5) a policy of targeting the
central bank's expectation of inflation must a fortiori dominate
the use of a single intermediate target, as the inflation expectation in
principle should incorporate all relevant information, including that
embodied in the intermediate target.) If, on the other hand,
intermediate targets do not bear a stable relationship to long-run
objectives, then there is no rationale for targeting them.
Although intermediate targets do not seem to provide a good
alternative, forecasting and controlling inflation directly is difficult
in practice. The temptation exists for central banks to try to use
various shortcuts to target inflation, for example, by adjusting policy
automatically in response to private-sector inflation forecasts, or to
the inflation forecasts implicit in certain asset prices. A theoretical
analysis I have conducted with Michael Woodford(6) suggests that such
shortcuts will not work, and might be quite dangerous.
Woodford and I study a dynamic model that incorporates sluggish
price adjustment and shocks to both aggregate demand and aggregate
supply. We show in this context that attempts to "target"
private-sector inflation forecasts (by allowing policy to respond
strongly to deviations between private-sector forecasts of inflation and
the official inflation objective) are typically inconsistent with the
existence of a rational expectations equilibrium; and, further, that
policies approximating targeting of private-sector forecasts are likely
to have undesirable properties. More generally, we show that central
bank policies that react to private-sector forecasts of any macro
variable (such as output or interest rates) are particularly susceptible
to indeterminacy of rational expectations equilibrium. Similar
conclusions apply to policies that attempt to target the inflation
forecasts implicit in asset prices (for example, in the spread between
yields on real and nominal bonds).
Our work does not imply that targeting the forecast of inflation is
impossible or that there is no useful information in asset prices and
private-sector forecasts. However, it does suggest that inflation
targeting central banks should base their policy decisions on explicit
structural models of the economy, not explicit or implicit
private-sector forecasts.
1 For an introduction and overview of the issues raised by
inflation targeting, see B. S. Bernanke and F S. Mishkin,
"Inflation Targeting: A New Framework for Monetary Policy?,"
NBER Working Paper No. 5893, July 1997; published in Journal of Economic
Perspectives, 11 (Spring 1997), pp. 97-116.
2 B. S. Bernanke and I. Mihov, "What Does the Bundesbank
Target?," NBER Working Paper No. 5764, September 1996; published in
European Economic Review, 41 (June 1997), pp. 1025-1054.
3 B. S. Bernanke and I. Mihov, "Measuring Monetary
Policy,"Quarterly Journal of Economics, 113 (August 1998), pp.
869-902.
4 B. S. Bernanke, T. Laubach F. S. Mishkin, and A. S. Posen,
Inflation Targeting: Lessons From the International Experience,
Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1998.
5 L. Svensson, "Inflation Forecast Targeting: Implementing and
Monitoring Inflation Targets," NBER Working Paper No. 5797, October
1997; published in European Economic Review, 41 (June 1997), pp.
1111-1146.
6 B. S. Bernanke and M. Woodford. "Inflation Forecasts and
Monetary Policy," NBER Working Paper No. 6157, September 1997;
published in Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking, 29 (November 1997,
part 2), pp. 653-684.
Ben S. Bernanke is a Research Associate in the NBER's Economic
Fluctuations and Growth and Monetary Economics Programs and a Professor
of Economics and Public Affairs at Princeton University.