Monetary Policy Actions
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The Central Bank has several policy actions available to use
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Depending on the severity of the economic conditions faced, they can choose to make changes to several if required
Monetary Policy Actions
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Exchange Rates |
Money Supply |
Forward Guidance |
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The Factors Considered by the MPC When Setting the Bank Rate
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The MPC considers how the economy is performing when adjusting the bank rate
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Their main goal is to achieve price stability
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They also consider the stage of the trade cycle and support government in achieving their macroeconomic objectives
Factors to Consider when Setting the Bank Rate
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Factors to consider |
Macroeconomic effects |
Impact on Setting Bank Rate |
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Economic expansion
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Economic contraction
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Monetary Policy Transmission Mechanisms
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The two main instruments of monetary policy include:
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Incremental adjustments to the interest rate (usually not more than 0.25%)
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Quantitative easing which increases the supply of money in the economy
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The Central Bank creates new money and uses it to buy open-market assets
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When a policy decision is made, it creates a ripple effect through the economy and this effect is known as a transmission mechanism
Diagram: Incremental Changes to Interest Rates

Before Explaining a Mechanism from the Diagram Above, Key Terminology Can Be Reviewed Below
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Official Rate |
Market Rates |
Asset Prices |
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Exchange Rate |
Net External Demand |
Inflation |
Example 1
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Official rate decreases by 0.25% → market rates decrease → loans are cheaper → consumers borrow more → consumption increases → AD increases → inflation increases
Example 2
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Official rate decreases by 0.25% → market rates decrease → mortgages are cheaper → property buyers borrow more → demand for houses increases → asset prices increase
Example 3
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Official rate decreases by 0.25% → market rates decrease → buyers borrow more → asset prices increase → households with assets feel wealthier → consumption increases → AD increases → inflation increases
Example 4
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Official rate increases by 0.25% → hot money flows increase → the exchange rate appreciates → exports more expensive and imports cheaper → net exports reduce → AD decreases → inflation decreases
Example 5
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Official rate increases by 0.25% → market rates increase → existing loan repayments now more expensive to repay → discretionary income falls → consumption decreases → AD decreases → inflation decreases
The transmission impact on exchange rates
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A change to the bank rate will have an impact on the exchange rate
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When the exchange rate changes, there will be a ripple effect through the economy
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This can be seen in the diagram above, where a change to the exchange rate leads to changes in the net external demand as well as the import prices
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How Interest Rates Impact Exchange Rates
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Impact of a Decrease in Interest Rates |
Impact of an Increase in Interest Rates |
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Using Interest Rates to Lower Inflation
Is inflation too high? Increase the interest rates
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If the MPC wants to lower inflation, it will increase the interest rate
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This lower rate aims to reduce aggregate demand and control inflation
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Contractionary monetary policy will shift aggregate demand to the left
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The Bank of England cut the Bank Rate nine times between December 2007 & March 2009 dropping from 5.75% to 0.5%
Diagram: Keynesian Contractionary Demand-side Policies

Diagram analysis
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Contractionary monetary policy will shift aggregate demand to the left (AD1 →AD2)
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AD shifts to the left because a higher interest rate impacts the components: Consumption (C ), Investment (I) and Exports and Imports (X − M) via the exchange rate
Consumption
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With the rise in interest rates, consumption declines as household borrowing is discouraged and savings are encouraged (C)
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The increase in interest rates on mortgages results in decreased disposable income for households
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Consumers now have less income and tend to spend less, leading to a notable decrease in aggregate demand (AD1 →AD2)
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This fall in aggregate demand contributes to a reduction in real GDP (YFE → Y1) and average price levels (AP1 → AP2)
Investment
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Investment falls as businesses borrow less due to higher interest rates
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Higher borrowing costs serve as a disincentive for businesses to undertake new investment projects
Responses