HomeNewsOpinionWhat central banks need to consider when making monetary policy in times of war and crisis

What central banks need to consider when making monetary policy in times of war and crisis

The central banks' lack of understanding about the non-monetary components of inflation in times of war and crisis, driven by disruptions in supply chains is reflected in its policy to tackle inflation through a series of interest rate hikes

May 10, 2023 / 13:02 IST
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Banking crisis
The central banks' lack of understanding about the non-monetary components of inflation in times of war and crisis is reflected in its policy.

The US Federal Reserve increased policy rates by 25 basis points on May 3, 2023 to tackle mounting inflation. Raising the interest rates in the continuum is detrimental as it induces global recession when other central banks especially in emerging economies are also compelled to raise the interest to pre-empt capital flight. This prolonged increase in interest rates significantly impacts global economic growth recovery process as it continues to depress consumption and investment demand, against the backdrop of geo-political risks and macroeconomic uncertainties. The Fed policy rate stands now at 5.25 percent.

However, the inflation is not yet back at 2 percent. The core inflation (which excludes food inflation and fuel inflation) is as high as 4.6 percent. Though there are expectations that the US Fed might likely “pause” the hawkish mode, the mounting inflation continues to remain a challenge and prevent them from reaching a “terminal policy rate” soon. US Fed chair Jay Powell has admitted the downside risks of policy rate hikes on economic growth, and said that he cannot deny a “mild recession”. As prices remain stubbornly high, the other central banks will also opt for interest rate hikes which can further deepen the economic downturn.

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Losing Grip on Macro-prudential Regulations

The US Fed’s aggressive rate hikes have adverse repercussions on the value of government bonds.  A Stanford Working Paper by Erica Jiang, Gregor Matvos, Tomasz Piskorski and Amit Seru (March 2023) noted that “marked-to-market bank assets have declined by an average of 10 percent across all the banks” following the Fed’s rate increases, “with the bottom fifth percentile experiencing a decline of 20 percent.” This reveals that the US Fed Reserve is losing its grip not only on inflation but also on its communications and macro-prudential regulations. These challenges faced by the Fed Reserve are increasingly affecting not just the US economy, but also the rest of the world.