Although this post is prompted by the bad press that the Bank
of England’s forward guidance has been getting recently, much of what I have to
say also applies to the US, where the policy is very similar. But there is one
criticism of the policy in both countries that I agree with which I will save
that until the end.
A good deal of the criticism seems to stem from a potentially
ambiguity about what the policy is designed to do. The policy could simply be
seen as an attempt to make monetary policy more transparent, and I think that
is the best way to think about it in both countries. However the policy could
also be seen as a commitment to raise future inflation above target in an
attempt to overcome the ZLB constraint as suggested by Michael Woodford in particular
[1]. Let’s call this the Woodfordian policy for short. (John Cochrane makes a
similar distinction here.)
Ironically the reason why it helps with transparency is also the reason
it could be confused with the Woodfordian policy.
In an earlier post written before the Bank of England
unveiled its version of forward guidance, I presented evidence that might lead
those outside the Bank to think that it was just
targeting 2% inflation two years out. We could describe that as the Bank being
an inflation forecast nutter, because it gave no weight to the output gap 2 years
out. An alternative policy is the conventional textbook one, where the Bank
targets both inflation and the output gap in all periods. I suggested that if
the Bank published forward guidance, this could clearly establish which policy
it was following. It has and it did: we now know it is not just targeting 2%
inflation 2 years out, because it says it will not raise rates if forecast
inflation is expected to be below 2.5% and unemployment remains above 7%. 2.5%
is not hugely different from 2%, but in the world of monetary policy much ‘ink’
is spilt over even smaller things.
So forward guidance has made things clearer, as long as you do
not think monetary policy is trying to implement a Woodfordian policy.
Unfortunately if you really believed a central bank was an inflation forecast
nutter, then you could see forward guidance in Woodford terms. Now I think
there are good arguments against this interpretation. First, 2.5% is an
incredibly modest Woodfordian policy. Second, for the US, there is a dual
mandate, which would seem to be inconsistent with being an inflation forecast
nutter. Third, for the UK, the MPC has made it pretty clear (most recently here) that it is not pursuing a Woodfordian policy. For all
these reasons, I think it is best to see forward guidance as increasing
transparency.
For those who just want to know whether monetary policy changes
represent stimulus or contraction, this can be confusing. We saw this in the UK
with the questioning of Mark Carney by the Treasury Select Committee, and Tony
Yates has pursued a similar theme. Mark Carney kept saying that the stance of monetary policy
is unchanged, but forward guidance makes monetary policy more ‘effective’. Now
you could spend pages trying to glean insights into disagreements among the MPC
from all this, and I do not want to claim that the Bank is always as clear as
it might be here. However it seems to me that if the Bank wants for some
reason to call reducing uncertainty increasing effectiveness, then there is
nothing wrong with what Carney is saying. Forward guidance helps agents in the
economy understand how monetary policy will react if something unexpected
happens. In particular, growth could be stronger than
expected (UK third quarter output has subsequently increased
by 0.8%), but the decline in unemployment could remain slow (it fell
from 7.8% to 7.7% over the last three months). Charlie Bean makes a similar case here. [2]
In much of the UK media forward guidance has been labelled a
failure because longer term interest rates went up as forward guidance was
rolled out. Now if you (incorrectly) see forward guidance as a Woodfordian
policy, you might indeed be disappointed that long rates went up (although you
would still want to abstract from other influences on rates at that time).
However if it is about clarifying monetary policy in general, no particular
movement in long rates is intended.
Ironically, some of the apparent critics of forward guidance in
the UK, like Chris Giles here, also think the Bank of England could be
much more transparent in various ways. The most comprehensive list is given by Tony Yates, and I agree with much of
what he says. But we all know that central banks are very conservative beasts,
and do things rather gradually. So any improvement in transparency is going to
be incremental and slow. When they do happen, in this case through forward
guidance, they should be welcomed rather than panned. Criticising innovation by
central banks risks fuelling their natural conservatism.
This suggests that the major weakness with forward guidance is
that it does not go far enough. In the current context, as events in the US
have shown, the major problem is that it applies only to interest rates and not
to unconventional monetary policy. This allowed the market to get very confused
about what the Fed’s future intentions about bond buying are. So why not
welcome forward guidance by saying can we have more please.
[2] If you wanted to be pedantic, you could argue that to the extent that some thought growth might be faster than expected, and that this would lead to higher rates even if unemployment remained high, then dispelling this particular possibility must mean that averaged across all states of the world policy has become more stimulatory. Carney might not want to acknowledge that because some on the MPC would get upset. My reaction to this would be, why do you want to be pedantic.