speeches · May 12, 2008
Regional President Speech
Sandra Pianalto · President
Globalization and Monetary Policy :: May 13, 2008 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
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Home > For the Public > News and Media > Speeches > 2008 > Globalization and Monetary Policy
Globalization and Monetary Policy
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Introduction
Sandra Pianalto
Central bankers share a common responsibility — keeping the
President and CEO,
purchasing power of our currencies stable. Over the past 30 years,
Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
policymakers around the world have come to realize that a low and
stable rate of inflation is indispensable for achieving other objectives, Global Interdependence Center (GIC)
like maximum sustainable economic growth, healthy labor markets, Abroad in Paris
and financial stability.
Paris, France
As a policymaker, I find myself in a challenging environment. In the
United States, the headline Consumer Price Index, or CPI, is rising at May 13, 2008
4%, and the core CPI, which takes out food and energy prices, is
rising at 2.4%. Yet despite price pressures, the Federal Reserve has
cut its federal funds rate target by 325 basis points since last fall in
response to turmoil in financial markets and to head off the
associated downside risks to economic growth. The substantial easing
of monetary policy to date, combined with ongoing measures to
foster market liquidity, should help to promote growth over time and
to mitigate risks to economic activity. I know that some observers are
saying that this strategy introduces other risks. For example, some
individuals question whether by lowering our policy rate in the face
of price pressures, we put at risk our goal of keeping inflation low
and stable over the long term.
While even the core price measures in the United States are rising
somewhat faster than I would prefer, and inflation presents a key
risk to my outlook, I believe that the Federal Reserve’s policy
strategy remains compatible with a low and stable inflation rate. To
better understand this strategy, I think it is important to distinguish
between the concept of inflation and the concept of relative-price
changes. This distinction is especially critical today, when relative
price pressures are both global and intense.
Today, I will explain how global price pressures can increase the
complexity of formulating monetary policy. I will begin by describing
the traditional definition of inflation. Then, I will discuss the
important distinction between inflation and relative price pressures.
Finally, I will draw on this distinction to explain why globalization
has not curtailed the ability of monetary policymakers to achieve
price stability.
Please note that the views I express today are mine alone and do not
necessarily reflect the views of my colleagues in the Federal Reserve
System.
Inflation
Let me begin by defining a word in the economist’s lexicon that is
often misused — inflation. Inflation refers to deterioration in the
purchasing power of money. It occurs when a central bank creates
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Globalization and Monetary Policy :: May 13, 2008 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
more money than the public wants to hold. The result is an eventual
rise in all prices and wages. And as long as this disparity between the
supply and demand for money persists, prices and wages will keep
rising.
Inflation is always a home-grown, monetary phenomenon that is
ultimately under the control of a central bank. How quickly
inflationary impulses filter through to wages and prices, however,
depends on many things—most importantly, on the state of inflation
expectations and on the degree of slack in an economy. When the
public generally anticipates inflation and when an economy is
operating at full capacity, monetary excesses can quickly translate
into higher prices and wages.
Globalization can exacerbate the inflation process only if it somehow
impairs central bank operations, but this seems unlikely. In fact,
some scholars believe that globalization has actuallyimprovedthe
behavior of central banks by penalizing those whose currencies lack a
stable purchasing power. These scholars contend that global
competition and the free flow of financial funds have encouraged
governments to establish independent, transparent central banks and
to accept more exchange-rate flexibility.
Indeed, world inflation moderated during the 1990s as the global
integration of financial markets accelerated. From the early 1970s to
the early 1990s, for example, world inflation averaged around 16
percent per year, according to the International Monetary Fund.
Since the mid-1990s, world inflation has averaged slightly less than 5
percent. Most of the recent improvement has come from developing
and emerging market economies—groups that previously lacked
monetary-policy discipline. By the mid-1980s, central banks in key
developed countries—notably the United States, England, Japan, and
many European countries—regained much of the credibility that they
had lost in the 1970s. In these countries, residents benefit both from
the direct effects of low and stable inflation, and the indirect effects
of having a currency with international-reserve status. From this
perspective, I do not believe that globalization prevents a central
bank from achieving its inflation objective.
Relative-Price Changes
Of course, prices can change for reasons other than inflation.
Individual prices continually adjust to changing supply and demand
pressures. Economists refer to these as relative-price adjustments,
and they are fundamentally different from inflation.
Relative-price changes convey important information about the
scarcity of particular goods and services. A rising relative price
indicates that demand is outstripping supply (or that supply is falling
behind demand), while a falling relative price indicates just the
opposite. Although relative-price changes can be quite uncomfortable
for consumers, they transmit vital information needed for the
efficient allocation of resources throughout any market economy.
When the relative price of a particular good rises, consumers tend to
conserve on that good and look for substitutes. Producers react to a
rising relative price by bringing more of the good to market in hopes
of boosting profits.
Inflation, by contrast, contributes no information useful to our
consumption, production, and labor choices. If anything, inflation can
add noise to the price signals that inform our decisions and may lead
people to make unsound economic choices. Even worse, inflation can
cause people to shift time and resources away from activities that
foster production and long-term economic growth and toward
activities that serve only to protect their wealth, rather than to
expand it.
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Globalization and Monetary Policy :: May 13, 2008 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
Globalization does not impair a central bank’s ability to control
inflation, but — as recent events demonstrate — it can sometimes
magnify relative-price changes by exposing individual countries more
intensely to global demand and supply pressures. Some of these
affect consumers’ pocketbooks directly, as through the prices of
imported and exported goods. Others, of course, are less direct. A lot
of domestic production uses foreign inputs, so domestic costs can rise
and fall with global price shocks. Similarly, foreign competition will
affect the pricing strategy of domestic firms and the wage demands
of domestic labor organizations. Some of the other beneficial effects
of globalization are even harder to see. By fostering specialization
and technology transfers, global market integration slowly improves
productivity and lowers unit costs, thereby supporting lower inflation.
At times, however, developments in world markets can create
obstacles for central banks. Petroleum, agricultural goods, and many
other commodities are now experiencing strong upward relative-price
pressures. Two factors seem to account for most of this. First, the
world has experienced nearly unprecedented economic performance
in recent years. Between 2004 and 2007, world output expanded at a
4.8 percent average annual rate. While emerging markets in Asia,
notably China and India, appear to have led the way, nearly every
nation on earth shared in the expansion. This growth and
development, however, has placed greater demands on world
resources, leading to sharp increases in relative prices. Since 2002,
the price of food imported into the Unites States has increased at an
average annual rate nearly 4 percent faster than the CPI, and the
price of imported industrial commodities has increased at an average
annual rate 15 percent faster than the CPI.
The second factor putting upward pressure on relative commodity
prices is the dollar’s depreciation. Since early 2002, the dollar has
fallen at a 5 percent average annual rate on a broad, trade-weighted
basis. A dollar depreciation raises the dollar price of goods that U.S.
residents import. It also lowers the foreign-currency price of all
dollar-denominated goods, whether they are produced in the United
States or abroad. In this way, a dollar depreciation shifts world
demand toward all goods denominated in dollars, which then raises
the relative dollar price of all such traded goods.
Relative-price pressures can be fairly broad-based. Oil and
agricultural products enter the production processes of a wide range
of other goods, from plastics to processed foods. Relative-price
pressures can also be persistent. Oil prices have ratcheted up over
the past nine years and the dollar has depreciated for more than six
years. Nevertheless, as long as a central bank is not creating an
excessive amount of money, these relative price pressures ought to
be transitory. As consumers spend more money for higher-priced
petroleum and agricultural goods, they eventually have less money to
spend on other goods and services. Other relative prices must then
fall. Eventually, the average rate at which prices change will be the
inflation rate as determined by the central bank.
Now, clearly, if people spend more on necessities such as higher-
priced energy and agricultural goods, their overall cost of living will
rise. If they do not also produce and sell these same commodities —
as is typically the case — their standards of living will fall, that is,
their incomes will buy less. Indeed, we have recently witnessed food
riots in some developing countries. While sometimes devastating,
these global relative-price pressures are not the same thing as
inflation.
Central Banks in a Global Economy
I have drawn a subtle, but important distinction between relative-
http://www.clevelandfed.org/For_the_Public/News_and_Media/Speeches/2008/Pianalto_20080513.cfm[4/29/2014 2:02:31 PM]
Globalization and Monetary Policy :: May 13, 2008 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
price pressures and inflation. Central banks cannot do anything about
relative prices. We do not produce oil, wheat, rice, or any other
commodities. But through our monetary policy actions, we can create
or prevent inflation. Globalization has not fundamentally impaired
our ability to provide long-term price stability, but it complicates
monetary policy in at least two key ways.
First, global relative price shocks can obscure a policymaker’s ability
to interpret price statistics, making it harder to distinguish between
temporary relative-price changes and inflation trends. We find
ourselves needing to analyze such things as the underlying nature of
foreign disturbances, or the persistence of exchange-rate changes, or
the degree of pass-through to import prices, or the response of
domestic competitors. Simply put, globalization requires us to expand
the amount of information we consider in our policy-making process.
Second, our ability to accurately interpret price statistics affects our
ability to communicate effectively with the public. Effective
communication helps us anchor inflation expectations. Lapses in our
ability to convey accurate and timely information about the
underlying nature of price changes can create uncertainties about
central bank objectives, damage our credibility, and impose costs on
the economy.
But, as I have said throughout my talk today, globalization
complicates our task; it does not prevent us from achieving our goals.
Conclusion
I hope that my remarks have further clarified the subtle, but very
important, difference between relative-price pressures and inflation.
I believe that the difference hinges on a distinction between relative-
price changes, which central banks can do nothing about, and
inflation, which central banks control.
As I outlined, globalization has increased the complexity of
distinguishing between relative-price changes and inflation, but I do
not believe that globalization has fundamentally curtailed the ability
of central banks to achieve their inflation objectives.
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Cite this document
APA
Sandra Pianalto (2008, May 12). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20080513_sandra_pianalto
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20080513_sandra_pianalto,
author = {Sandra Pianalto},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2008},
month = {May},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20080513_sandra_pianalto},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}