The academic merits of using intermediate targets as monetary policy
tools have filled the pages of numerous economic journals over the past
few decades. But, as successive intermediate targets have run into
difficulties, policy-makers in a number of countries have shifted
instead to targeting the inflation rate itself.
New Zealand was the first country to shift to an inflation target in
1989, followed closely by Canada in 1991. In both cases, the shift
followed an unsatisfactory period trying to target unstable money
targets as apparently stable relationships between monetary aggregates
and the price level broke down.
But it was the 1992-3 crisis in the European exchange rate mechanism
(ERM) that hastened the shift away from monetary and exchange rate
targets and towards inflation targets. The UK, Sweden and Finland have
all introduced inflation targets after they were forced to leave (or
break fixed exchange rate links with) the ERM.
Yet, despite these inauspicious beginnings, the shift to inflation
targeting has so far been successful. This is the cautious conclusion of
a recently published CEPR Report, which provides the first comprehensive
evaluation of the impact of these inflation targets on monetary policy
and inflation performance.
The Report examines the experiences of five countries which have
explicit inflation target regimes - Canada, Finland, New Zealand, Sweden
and the UK - and compares them with those of four other, less explicit
regimes - Germany, Israel, Italy and the US.
The Report defines an inflation target regime by two characteristics:
the country must have an explicit quantitative inflation target; and
there is usually no explicit intermediate target for monetary aggregates
or the exchange rate. All five inflation target regime countries pass
both tests, while the US Federal Reserve fails both of them.
But there are considerable variations among the five inflation target
regimes. In each country, the inflation target will typically specify an
appropriate inflation indicator, target level, tolerance interval and
time frame, both medium- and long-term. It may also define the
situations under which the target may be modified or disregarded.
Finland has a point inflation target of 2 per cent, New Zealand has an
inflation target range of 0-2 per cent and the UK has a target range of
1-4 per cent and a point objective of 2.5 per cent or less.
The legal and institutional supports for inflation targets also vary
widely. At one extreme, as in New Zealand, the targets are one element
of a three part strategy for improving monetary performance: a
legislated price stability goal, independence of the central bank in
choosing the means to fulfil the goal, and clear accountability for the
central bank. In the UK, by contrast, the government both decides its
own target, which is not statutorily defined, and sets interest rates to
meet that target after consulting the Bank of England.
The case for inflation targets is twofold. First, they are a better
way of anchoring and coordinating expectations among wage bargainers and
in financial markets than a more abstract intermediate target such as
the rate of broad money growth. Second, they reinforce the authorities'
commitment, discipline and accountability for the achievement of price
stability by providing a clear yardstick against which to judge policy.
In practice, however, inflation targets run into many of the same
difficulties facing monetary and exchange rate targets. The fact that
the price level reacts with ‘long and variable lags’ - and with
varying effects - to changes in interest rates means that there is
considerable uncertainty about how to pull the policy levers to meet the
inflation target eighteen months or two years ahead. Intermediate
indicators, such as changes in monetary aggregates and exchange rates,
inevitably continue to have operational significance.
Indeed, the fact that there are as yet no simple rules for how
monetary policy should be conducted in the varying circumstances that
may arise under an inflation target regime helps explain why
policy-makers in inflation target regime countries have stressed the
importance of transparency and openness in order to build credibility.
So how have inflation targets performed? Impressively to date, the
Report concludes, with targets generally fulfilled or even undershot.
But the hard part may be yet to come. In most countries, the targets
were adopted in a period of considerable slack in the economy, and
countries without explicit targets have also recently had relatively low
inflation. Greater inflationary pressures will show more clearly whether
inflation targets regimes are more effective than other monetary
regimes, and the relative importance of the target as opposed to the
institutional set-up. Particularly important will be a comparison of New
Zealand with other target regimes, such as the UK, which has declined to
adopt central bank independence.
In any case, the debate over the relative merits of money and
inflation rate targets will intensify over the next few years as the
blueprints for European economic and monetary union (EMU) are refined
and the question of the relationship between ‘ins’ and ‘outs’ is
defined.
The inevitable time lag in tracking the link between money and
inflation at the European aggregate level during Stage III of EMU may
make targeting EMU-wide inflation a more sensible objective. And
inflation targets have also been proposed as a way of stabilizing and
codifying the economic relationships between the monetary union and
those European countries which cannot, and choose not, to join at the
beginning.
Yet Bundesbank officials show no sign of losing their long-standing
enthusiasm for broad money targeting. And if they have their way, that
will be the model that the independent European Central Bank also adopts
when, and if, Stage III begins in January 1999.
Inflation Targets is edited by Leonardo Leiderman (Tel Aviv
University and CEPR) and Lars E O Svensson (Institute for International
Economic Studies, Stockholm University, and CEPR). The following
economists contributed: Charles Freedman (Bank of Canada), Andreas
Fischer (Schweizerische National Bank), Alex Bowen (Bank of England),
Johnny Åkerholm and Anne Brunila (Bank of Finland), Jurgen von Hagen (Universität
Mannheim, Indiana University, and CEPR), Marvin Goodfriend (Federal
Reserve Bank of Richmond), Ignazio Visco (Banca d’Italia), Gil Bufman
and Meir Sokoler (Bank of Israel) and Alex Cukierman (Tel Aviv
University and Tilburg University). Support for the publication was
provided by the Commission of the European Communities under its Human
Capital and Mobility programme.