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Central banking is more than tinkering with interest rates

Central bank heavyweights are meeting now in Jackson Hole, US. One issue they should discuss, even if informally, is are their monetary policy meetings too frequent? The Fed’s eight a year forces over-allocation of resources towards monetary policy preparation. It comes at the expense of other critical functions. Four meetings a year are adequate

August 23, 2024 / 15:34 IST
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Central banking
How often should central banks have their Monetary Policy Committee, or equivalent, meetings to decide upon the policy rate?

As the annual Jackson Hole Wyoming conference of central bankers is underway, all ears will be geared to the statements of the Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell. As usual, every phrase and sentence that he utters will be parsed by bond and equity traders to assess what the Fed will do in its upcoming mid-September meeting.

Despite falling inflation, there is deep discontent among the public about high prices for food. Democratic Presidential candidate Kamala Harris has stated that she will push for legislation to control price gouging.  Further, unless conflict between Russia and Ukraine and Israel and Iran deescalates, the risk of an oil price spike looms in the background. Nevertheless, the weak jobs report for July, signalling recession by the Sahm rule, coupled with just reported big downward revisions to job growth, along with headline inflation falling below 3 percent for the first time since April 2021, all put together strongly suggest a rate cut in September. The big uncertainty seems to be only whether it will be 25 or 50 basis points.

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Against this backdrop, it is worthwhile to ask a very different question that, it seems to me, is not raised in discussions of monetary policy.

How often should central banks have their Monetary Policy Committee, or equivalent, meetings to decide upon the policy rate and/or related choices such as the Cash Reserve Ratio?