An MP who is a member of the Treasury Select Committee has described the Bank of England as an unreliable
boyfriend: “one day hot, one day cold". City economists make similar
complaints. The same is frequently said in the US about supposed Fed
communication failures. Are these complaints justified?
In judging whether a central bank is really ‘blowing hot and
cold’, we need to distinguish between public information about the economy on
the one hand, and how policymakers will behave given new information on the
other (in technical terms, their ‘reactions functions’). If you start flirting
with your boyfriend’s best mate, you should not be surprised if he starts going
a little cold. If, on the other hand, he had been attentive and considerate
until the World Cup started, since when you have been completely ignored, you
have probably learnt something about him that you did not know before.
The problem is that we cannot know for sure how each MPC or FOMC member
will react to new bits of data as they emerge. So when Mark Carney in his
Mansion House speech said “There’s already great speculation
about the exact timing of the first rate hike and this decision is becoming
more balanced.” he could have just been reflecting the fact that recent data
had been surprisingly strong. As everyone had seen this data, there was no
useful additional information in that statement.
However he went on to say “It could happen sooner than markets
currently expect.” The intent of that statement is clear. For some reason
markets had not reacted to this recent data (and therefore advanced their
expectations about when the first rate increase would occur) in the way Mark
Carney or the MPC as a whole had done. So they had got the Bank’s reaction
function wrong, and Carney was telling them so.
This is why the market reacted strongly to Carney’s speech, and
Carney intended them to do so. The trick was to
reference something tangible - the market’s forecast for when interest rates
were likely to rise. But this raises an obvious question. If part of the Bank’s
communications strategy is to make comments about market forecasts of interest
rates, wouldn’t it be both clearer and more efficient to have the Bank’s own
forecast about interest rates. This is a point that ex-Bank economist Tony
Yates makes here.
I have argued for this for some time (e.g. here, para 105), and was therefore enthusiastic when the Fed started to publish
rate forecasts just after I started this blog. The idea is obviously not to
commit the central bank to some path: a forecast is a forecast. Nor is the idea
that the central bank somehow knows more about the data than the market, or
that its ability to forecast is better. What publishing
a forecast allows the market to do is get a better idea of character of their
‘boyfriend’. (It also allows the public to check that their boyfriend is not
being time inconsistent, as I also explain here.)
It is only a matter of time before the Bank of England does
this, and continues in its tradition of following the Fed. One interesting
question of detail remains, however. Should the Bank publish a single forecast,
or follow the Fed and publish the forecasts of each MPC member? (I give an
example of the FOMC ‘blue dots’ in this post.) There are arguments for both. The Bank
publishes a forecast for inflation and other aspects of the economy, but only
on the basis of market guesses of future rates. It would be much more efficient
and informative to publish forecasts based on the Bank’s best guess about the
future path of interest rates.
The problem with having just one forecast is illustrated by the
Carney speech. Was Carney at the time giving his view, or the view of the MPC?
If the latter, how unanimous was that view? If subsequently a member of the MPC
says something different, is that consistent with the majority view or a
change? This problem becomes particularly acute when new MPC members replace
old. Questions such as these can only be answered if individual MPC members
give their own personal forecasts, as FOMC members currently do but with, in
addition, their names attached.
When it comes to monetary policy, we have not one but many
‘boyfriends’. Now boyfriends can get annoyed if you keep asking them ‘what are
you thinking’, but in this case we do rely on them (and pay them) rather a lot,
so I think we are entitled to know.
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