Why the Bank of England Should Target Growth

Monetary policy keeps going in circles.

Prof Linda Yueh of LBS in this piece argues that Bank of England should also target growth. The Bank of England recently raised its interest rates after a long pause at 0.5%. The reason behind rate hike is both normalisation of policy rates and expected inflation rising in future.

The Bank of England raised interest rates to 0.75% this month, in the belief that inflation will exceed its mandated 2% target in about two years. But raising interest rates tends to dampen economic activity, and growth is hardly rampaging in the United Kingdom. Should the BoE consider a change to its mandate to include economic growth?

In the United States, the Federal Reserve has a dual mandate: price stability and maximum employment. Of course, the Fed has also raised interest rates this year; but the US economy is growing at over 4% and GDP is expected to be around 3% higher this year.

By contrast, the UK economy grew just 0.2% in the first quarter of this year. While the BoE expects growth to rebound and end up at around 1.5% for the year, it describes this rate as the “speed limit.” Faster growth would fuel inflationary pressures.

With UK unemployment at 4.2% – a level consistent with full employment in the BoE’s view – hiring workers will mean higher wages. And, because price increases are a function of wages plus a mark-up, inflation will rise. The BoE’s decision to raise interest rates despite slow economic growth reflected its concern for its 2% inflation target.

Given that the British economy grew at an average of 2.5% between 1980 and 2007, the BoE’s projection of 1.5% potential growth amounts to a significant downgrade. The culprit is poor productivity growth. From 1998 until the 2008 global financial crisis, annual productivity growth averaged 2.25%. The BoE now believes the rate to be closer to 1-1.25%.

If BoE had a growth target as well, it would have to balance growth and inflation:

Consider a scenario in which the BoE were given a mandate to maximize economic growth and meet a 2% inflation target. If policymakers expected inflation to reach 2%, but economic growth to be less than 2%, in two years, then they would need to balance how much economic dampening a rate rise would bring about. In other words, their inflation target may be met, but if growth is tepid, confronting a trade-off between the two targets might stay the BoE’s hand for a while longer – just as the Fed keeps an eye on employment, even though monetary policy doesn’t really affect long-run growth.

What makes this tricky is that it is hard to estimate an economy’s potential growth rate, which can change. If productivity growth picked up, then 2.5% GDP growth could again be the “speed limit.” So, a central bank with a growth mandate may tread a bit more carefully in case its actions dampened activity that could increase national output to its new potential rate.

Another reason for the BoE to consider a mandate that includes economic growth is the weakening relationship between inflation and the rest of the economy. In other words, unlike in the past, price growth is not that closely related to unemployment or output.

For example, inflation was high in the immediate aftermath of the 2008 crisis, suggesting that the UK economy was booming when it wasn’t; unemployment was fairly high then as well. Prices were rising because the pound was weak, boosting the cost of imports, and global oil prices were high.

During this period, the BoE often missed its inflation target, fueling criticism that the target was ineffectual. The reason not to raise rates, however, was evident: the economy was coping with the aftermath of the Great Recession. With economic growth as an explicit part of its mandate, the BoE could explain itself better in such circumstances – and better maintain the credibility of its commitment to price stability.

Targeting price stability alone may have worked when inflation was a more reliable proxy of the business cycle. Now that it isn’t, the BoE – and perhaps other central banks – should consider a change in mandate to target growth as well.

Hmm..

All these years Bank of England was chided for not able to keep control of its monetary policy leading to inflation targeting in 1997. Now, we are back to pre-1997 era where we want the central bank to start looking at growth as well.

But then BoE is not alone here. NZ has joined in with a dual mandate (unemployment) and one expects others to join as well.

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.