1
The First Year of the
Eurosystem: Inflation Targeting or Not?
On January 1,
1999, the Euro was
launched and the Eurosystem (the ECB and 11 na-
tional
central banks in Europe) took
responsibility for monetary policy in the
Euro area.
This paper is
a brief evaluation of
the Eurosystem™s monetary-policy regime after its –rst
year, in
particular of the extent to
which it is similar to in/ation targeting as practiced
by an
increasing number of central
banks. 1 I examine three elements of the Eurosystem,
namely the
goals, theframework for
monetary-policy decisions and the communication
with
outsiders. Criteria for
evaluation are whether the goals are unambiguous and appro-
priate;
whether the decision
framework is e¢cient in collecting and processing information
and reaching
decisions that are
appropriate relative to the goals; and whether the commu-
nication is
e¤ective in motivating
decisions, simplifying external evaluation and thereby
improving
transparency and
accountability. I also consider whether the actual instrument
setting has
been appropriate, given
the information available at the times of decision.
During the
1990s an increasing
number of central banks have adopted in/ation tar-
geting, which
due to its logical and
transparent design and apparent success so far has
become a
focus of interest and a
natural frame of reference. In/ation targeting is char-
acterized by,
–rst, an explicit
numerical in/ation target. The in/ation target is pursued
in the medium
run, with due concern
for avoiding real instability, for instance, in the
output-gap;
that is, in/ation
targeting is is/exiblel; rather than ihstrict.l; Second, due to
the
unavoidable lags in the e¤ects
of instruments on in/ation, the decision framework is in
practice
irin/ation-forecast
targetingl- (see below). Third, communication is very explicit
and to the
point; policy decisions
are consistently motivated with reference to published
in/ation and
output(-gap) forecasts.
Indeed, in/ation targeting has introduced unprece-
dented
transparency and
accountability in monetary policy. Three central banksŠthe.Reserve Bank
of New Zealand,
the Bank of England, and Sweden™s Sveriges RiksbankŠ
stand out as
particularly consistent
and transparent in their implementation of in/ation
targeting.
I. Goals
The
Maastricht Treaty assigns price
stability as the primary objective for the Eu-
rosystem but
leaves to the
Eurosystem the formulation of an operational de–nition. In
October 1998
the Eurosystem de–ned
price stability as isas a year-on-year increase in the
Harmonised
Index of Consumer Prices
for the euro area of below 2%lo (ECB 1998a). It has
several times
emphasized the
medium-term orientation of its policy and that a gradualist
and measured
response to threats to
price stability will not introduce inunnecessary and
possibly
self-sustaining uncertainty
into short-term interest rates or the real economy...le
(ECB 1999).
This emphasis on the
medium term, gradualism, and stability of the real
economy is
consistent with
ii/exiblel, rather than ihstrictll in/ation targeting.
However, as
commentators quickly
pointed out, the Eurosystem™s de–nition of price
stability was
ambiguous, since it
did not specify a lower bound for in/ation. In November
1998 the ECB
president, Willem
Duisenberg (1998a), clari–ed that the word i‚Xincreasel¨C
should be
interpreted as excluding
de/ation. It would seem to follow that the lower bound
was zero and
that the de–nition
refers to an in/ation rate between 0 and 2%. However,
two days
later, Duisenberg (1998b)
stated that ih[w]e did not announce a /oor for in/ation,
because we
know that the price index
may include a measurement bias, but we do not
know its
magnitudel,.
If the lower
bound is zero, it would
seem logical to use the midpoint, 1%, as the point
in/ation
target in the calculation
of the M3 reference value. However, when the reference
value was
announced in December 1998
(ECB 1998b), it appeared that a point in/ation
target of
1.5% had been used
instead.
To this date
(January 2000), so far
as I know, the Eurosystem has not yet been
explicit
about the lower bound. If
this omission were due to uncertainty about possible
measurement
bias, it would seem that
this would a¤ect both the lower and upper bound to
the same
extent; otherwise, the
width of the range becomes dependent on the measurement
2.bias. It is
di¢cult to see any
bene–t from such ambiguity. An unambiguous symmetric
de–nition
(for instance, inabove 0
and below 2%lo) would seem preferable, especially since
de/ation may
be as serious a threat
these days as in/ation. 2
II. Decision
Framework
Although
in/ation targeting is
technically di¢cult in practice, the principles of in/a-
tion
targeting are relatively
straightforward. Given that monetary policy actions a¤ect in-
/ation with a
lag, e¢cient in/ation
targeting requires in/ation-forecast targeting (see, for
instance,
Lars Svensson (1997) and
(1999a) and Svensson and Michael Woodford (1999)).
That is, the
central bank needs to
make conditional in/ation forecasts (conditional on
its view of
the transmission
mechanism, the current state of the economy, and a given
planned path
for its instrument
rate). The bank then selects the instrument plan that
results in an
inoptimallo in/ation
forecast, that is, an in/ation forecast that approaches the
in/ation
target at an appropriate
pace without causing too much variability in the real
economy or
interest rates. The bank
then starts implementing the instrument plan, by
setting the
interest rate
accordingly. At regular intervals, if new signi–cant information
has been
collected, the procedure is
repeated and a new interest rate plan adopted and
implemented.
From this perspective,
in/ation-forecast targeting is just an algorithm to
solve an
intertemporal optimization
problem. With minor di¤erences, this is the decision
framework
used by all
in/ation-targeting central banks. 3 Thus, if the Eurosystem wants to
meet its
de–nition of price
stability in the medium term, it must decide on an instrument
plan such
that the corresponding
in/ation forecast in the medium term, conditional on all
relevant
information and its instrument
plan, falls between the undisclosed lower bound
and the upper
bound of 2%.
In October
1998, the Eurosystem (ECB
1998a, see also ECB 1999) announced that
the monetary
policy strategy would
consist of iftwo key elements,ld later called iathe two
pillars:ll
The –rst pillar is isa
prominent role for moneyle with a reference value for M3
growth, set
at 4.5% in December 1998
(ECB 1998b). Monetary targeting per se was
rejected,
however. Instead money™s
role as an indicator of future in/ation was emphasized:
i_Deviations
of current monetary
growth from the reference value would, under normal
3.circumstances,
signal risks to
price stability.le The reference value was reconsidered in
December 1999
and maintained at
4.5%. The second pillar is a isbroadly-based assessment
of the
outlook for price
developments and the risks to price stability,ls where the assessment
is made
iausing a wide range of
economic and –nancial variables as indicators for future
price
developments.lr
From the
above discussion, it is clear
that the –rst pillar is redundant. Only the second
pillar is
needed, if interpreted as
a conditional forecast, taking into account all relevant
information,
including that in
monetary aggregates. There seem to be no rational reason
for giving a
certain set of
indicators of future in/ation the status of a separate i—ápillarla
(rather than
one of the bricks in
one main pillar). This instead makes the framework
inconsistent
and ambiguous, as
several observers have noted. In contrast, when the Swiss
National Bank
(1999) in December
1999 announced that it would abandon monetary
targeting, it
simply made clear that
ih[m]onetary policy decisions will be based mainly on
an in/ation
forecast, which will
take all relevant indicators into account.lo
III.
Communication
In/ation-targeting
central banks
make considerable e¤ort to explaining past outcomes
and motivate
current policy
decisions, typically with reference to published conditional in-
/ation
forecasts. For instance,
Sveriges Riksbank organizes its quarterly In/ation Report
(see, e.g.,
Sveriges Riksbank, 1999)
according to its view of the transmission mechanism
and the
determination of in/ation;
it also systematically updates its estimates of the main
determinants
of in/ation and
summarizes the resulting adjustments in its conditional in-
/ation
forecast relative to that
reported in the previous In/ation Report. The degree of
uncertainty
in the forecast is also
updated and assessed in each Report.
These
practices of
in/ation-targeting central banks allow outside observers to scruti-
nize the
central banks™ analysis and
forecasts and then judge whether the policy decisions
taken are
appropriate, given the
goals and available information. Several central banks
also publish
minutes from the
monetary policy meetings, which allows outsiders further
1
to assess
whether the discussion and
analysis are competent, whether the various argu-
ments
presented are appropriate, and
whether –nal decisions are consistent with the goals.
4.Altogether,
this commitment to
communicate simpli–es outside monitoring and evalua-
tion of
monetary policy, strengthens
the accountability of the central banks, and provides
stronger
incentives for the banks to
ful–ll their announced goals. Compared to previous
monetary-policy
regimes, the
in/ation targeting has introduced an unprecedentedly high
degree of
transparency into monetary
policy.
How does the
Eurosystem compare? So
far the Eurosystem has not published its most
crucial
information, the internal
forecasts. Indeed, initially keeping the forecasts secret
was
considered a virtue (Duisenberg
1998a): i9... publishing an in/ation forecast would
obscure
rather than clarify what the
Governing Council is actually doing. ... [B]ecause
publishing a
single in/ation
forecast would be likely to suggest that monetary policy re-
acts
mechanistically to this
forecast, publication might mislead the public and therefore
run counter
to the principle of
clarity.lo However, since September 1999 several public
statements
have indicated that
forecasts will be published, and in December Duisenberg
(1999)
stated: itWe, of course also
compare those [external] forecasts with our internal
preliminary
forecasts, which will
ultimately be published in the course of next year...lx.
The extended
quarterly versions of
the Monthly Bulletin of June, September and Decem-
ber 1999 have
started to report
external forecasts. Duisenberg (1999) actually seems to
reveal ECB™s
internal forecast:
io...the European Commission also forecasts average in/a-tion in 2000
and 2001
to be 1.5%, and we see no reason to deviate from that forecastl
(emphasis
added). Duisenberg did not reveal whether this number should be
interpreted as
an unconditional forecast (conditional on optimal policy by the
Eurosystem) or
a conditional forecast (for instance, conditional on an unchanged
interest
rate). In the formercase, it seems that 1.5% for 2001 should probably
be
interpreted as the Eurosystem™s point in/ation target (consistent with
the
in/ation target used in the calculation of the M3 reference value).
The
Eurosystem does not publish
minutes and voting records of the General Council meetings. Instead, it
has
argued that the introductory statement at the press conference held
immediately
after the meetings are similar to iosummary minutes.ll If that is the
case, a
comparison of the statements with the minutes of Bank of England and
Sveriges
Riks- bank gives the unfortunate impression that the Eurosystem is
considerably
less advanced,
5.systematic,
and forward-looking
than those banks. The 2-week delay in publishing the minutes from Bank
of
England is probably close to the minimal time necessary to summarize
and edit
sophisticated and detailed discussions and arguments. In any case, a
press
conference is certainly not a commitment to give an adequate report of
the
discussions at a meeting and rather an invitation to a somewhat
selective
presentation.
The
Eurosystem™s reluctance to be
more open and transparent, in particular in publishing internal
forecasts and
minutes, has probably been quite costly from a public-relations
perspective.
The Eurosystem™s repeated pronouncements about its high degree of
transparency
(for instance, Ignazio Angeloni and Otmar Issing, 1999) have not
carried far,
since critics have the easy task of pointing to other central banks
that are
clearly more transparent.
IV. Actual
Instrument Decisions
The
Eurosystem™s main instrument is
its itmain re–nancing rate,lc a short repurchase rate. On December 22,
1998,
the Eurosystem announced that it would set an initial rate
of 3%. On
April 8, 1999, the rate
was lowered to 2.5%. On November 4, the rate was
increased to
3%. Were these decisions
appropriate, given the goals of the Eurosystem and
the
information available at the
times of decision?
Did the
Eurosystem take its
controversial –rst pillar into account? Between October
1998 and
October 1999, the 3-month
moving average of 12-month M3 growth rates /uc-
tuated
between 4.7% and 6.0%. At the
time of the decision in April, the 3-month moving
average of
the 12-month M3 growth
through February was 5.1%, well above the reference
value of 4.5%
(the money-growth rate
is published with about 4 weeks lag). Presumably,
this should
have motivated an
increase rather than a decrease of the interest rate. During
March-September,
the moving average
rose steadily to 5.9%, motivating an increase, but
not
necessarily as late as November.
Obviously, the –rst pillar has been disregarded at
the
Eurosystem™s discretionŠhardly
surprising, given its redundancy.
Instrument
decisions should ideally
be evaluated ex ante, given the information avail-able to the
Eurosystem at the
time of the decisions. The crucial information would include the
Eurosystem™s
internal conditional in/ation forecasts during the period, for
instance, 6.the
conditional in/ation forecasts for 3% and 2.5% interest rates in April
and
November, respectively. Since the Eurosystem has declined to make this
information available and to allow outside scrutiny of its forecasts,
it is not
possible to decide with any precision whether the decisions were
appropriate.
Using external forecasts is problematic, since the
assumptions
of external forecasters
about Eurosystem monetary policy need to be sorted out. Nevertheless,
it is
reassuring that external forecasts, as reported in the December 1999
Monthly
Bulletin (and apparently also internal forecasts, see above) point to
average
in/ation of 1.5% in 2000 and 2001.
Because of
the transmission lags in
monetary policy, it is too early for any ex post evaluation of
Eurosystem
decisions. Another year or two will be needed for that. Since actual
outcomes
are contaminated by shocks occurring after instrument decisions, or
unknown at
the time of decisions, ex
post evaluation is far from straightforward. Missing the target range
is not
necessarily evidence of a mistake, and meeting it is not necessarily
evidence of
good decisions.
V. Conclusions
The –rst year
of the Eurosystem has
seen a successful launch of the Euro and an apparently successful
introduction
of the common monetary policy. The Eurosystem monetary strategy is
quite
similar to /exible in/ation targeting, for instance, in having a
quantitative
de–nition of price
stability, in the emphasis on the medium term, and in the concern to
avoid real
instability. Eventual publication of internal forecasts would increase
this
similarity. There seem to be no
fatal mistakes in either design or instrument setting.
Still, there
is considerable room
for improvement with regard to internal consistency and transparency of
the
regime.
The remaining
asymmetry and
ambiguity in the de–nition of price stability, although minor, does not
seem to
serve any useful purpose. The insistence on the separate –rst pillar is
an
important source of ambiguity and inconsistency. The –rst pillar is
redun-
dant (as also
indicated by the –rst
year™s experience), if the second pillar is interpreted as a
conditional
in/ation forecast incorporating all relevant information, including
monetary
aggregates. A rational role for monetary aggregates is to contribute to
conditional 7.forecasts, among other indicators and according to their
predictive power, as for the in/ation-targeting central banks (and now
apparently also the Swiss National Bank).
There is
considerable room for
increased transparency about General Council meetings.
The
introductory
statements at the press conference after the meetings are hardly
substitutes
for the minutes published by the in/ation-targeting central banks,
certainly
not if the meetings become more sophisticated and are the genuine locus
for
decisions. It is di¢cult to see that the Eurosystem could lose from
further
increases in consistency and transparency.
It is worth emphasizing that since the ECB was
created in 1998, it has made sin cere e¤orts to maintain an open
dialogue with
academic researchers and external experts, including critics, as
witnessed by
an active visitors program and participation in and organization of a
number of
academic conferences. Visitors to the ECB have also experienced
open-minded,
sophisticated and informative discussions with a very competent and
insightful
sta¤. Overall, I believe there are good reasons to be optimistic about
the
future of Eurosystem monetary policy.
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