• A
  • A
  • A
  • ABC
  • ABC
  • ABC
  • А
  • А
  • А
  • А
  • А
Regular version of the site

The IMF’s Message Is ‘Target What You Can Hit’

On September 28th 2011, Daniel Leigh and John Bluedorn, economists from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), presented the latest issue of the World Economic Outlook (forecasts and analysis) ‘Slowing growth, rising risks’ at the Higher School of Economics.

 Video

Professor Martin Gilman, former IMF representative and now director of the Center for Advanced Studies at NRU HSE, introduced the guests from the IMF Research department by saying, ‘Today we will be discussing the current state of the world economy and we won’t be talking about Russia specifically as our IMF colleagues offer a broader comparative economic outlook’.

Among the significant points of John Bluedorn’s presentation was his statement: ‘Fiscal policy has a key role to play in global demand rebalancing because it has a large and long-lasting effect on an economy’s external balance. The current account improves because imports fall with weaker domestic consumption and investment, and exports rise with the currency depreciation that tends to follow fiscal tightening. When economies tighten fiscal policies simultaneously, what matters for the current account is how much each economy consolidates relative to others. The current pattern of fiscal adjustment plans will contribute to a narrowing of euro area imbalances and emerging Asian trade surpluses, but a widening of the U.S. current account deficit’.         

IMF experts believe that fiscal adjustment will be one of the dominant forces shaping the global economy in the coming years. To restore fiscal sustainability, many advanced economies need to reduce their budget deficit. Emerging and developing economies are tightening to rebuild their fiscal policy and in some cases to limit overheating pressures.

What implications will these fiscal adjustments have for economies’ external balances? The IMF researchers believe that in economies with twin budget and trade deficits, such as the United States and some economies in the eurozone, policymakers are hoping that fiscal consolidation will reduce both deficits. For economies such as China, Germany, and Japan, fiscal consolidation could further increase their existing trade surpluses.

Concluding his presentation John Bluedorn said: ‘When many economies consolidate at the same time, what matters for the current account is how much consolidation an economy undertakes relativeto others. This is because all economies cannot improve their current account balances at the same time. Some economies—including Australia, Canada, the United Kingdom, and some members of the euro area — are expected to undertake relatively large and permanent fiscal consolidation measures. For these economies, fiscal adjustment is expected to contribute positively to their external balances. Germany and emerging Asia are also consolidating, but by a lesser amount. This should contribute to a lowering of their external surpluses. Finally, the relatively small size of permanent fiscal consolidation measures currently envisioned for the United States suggests that they will contribute little to reducing the U.S. current account deficit’.

Sergey Aleksashenko and Martin Gilman
Sergey Aleksashenko and Martin Gilman
Daniel Leigh dedicated his presentation to an examination of the inflationary effects of commodity price movements and the appropriate monetary policy response. He pointed out that recent world commodity prices have been volatile and said: ‘We find that commodity price movements have stronger and longer lasting effects on inflation in economies with high shares of food in the consumption basket and in economies with less firmly anchored inflation expectations. A number of emerging and developing economies share these characteristics’.

‘The main policy message, - Daniel Leigh continued, - is ‘target what you can hit.’ Since shocks to commodity prices are typically hard to predict and often not sustained, central banks seeking to establish credibility are generally better off communicating their policy objectives in terms of underlying inflation rather than headline inflation. While targeting headline inflation can lower the volatility of headline inflation, it can only do so at the cost of significantly higher volatility in economic activity’.

 

Valentina Gruzintseva, HSE News Service

Photos by Nikita Benzoruk

See also:

Economists Suggest Using Media's Attention to Bitcoin to Predict its Returns

Researchers at the HSE Faculty of Economic Sciences have studied the relationship between the changes in the bitcoin prices and the media attention to this cryptocurrency. The researchers examined the mentions of bitcoin in the media between 2017 and 2021 and built a mathematical model that revealed the strong relationship between media attention and bitcoin prices. The study was published in the Applied Stochastic Models in Business and Industry journal.

HSE Economists Develop a Model for Sustainable Solar Geoengineering Agreements

Researchers at HSE University and George Mason University have investigated the sustainability of prospective international agreements on solar geoengineering. The authors have proposed a scheme in which payments flow from affluent nations to less wealthy ones; an arrangement which sets their proposal apart from traditional systems. The proposed model aims to dissuade more vulnerable countries from excessive use of the prevalent geoengineering method by providing compensation for the potential damage they may incur and supporting their adaptation to climate change. The paper has been published in Environmental and Resource Economics.

Crypto Investors Receive Downside Risk Premiums

Victoria Dobrynskaya, Assistant Professor at the HSE Faculty of Economic Sciences, has analysed the price dynamics of 2,000 cryptocurrencies from 2014 to 2021 and investigated the association between downside risks and average returns in the cryptocurrency market. As it turns out, cryptocurrencies exhibiting a greater risk tend to yield higher average returns. The study has been published in International Review of Financial Analysis.

Results of the Contest to Predict Nobel Prize Winners in Economics

Claudia Goldin's award was predicted by five people. They are Olga Peresypkina (RSVPU), Anastasia Sirotina (first-year student of the Bachelor's in Applied Mathematics and Information Science at HSE University), Mikhail Shabanov (Global Vision Asset Management LLC), Tatul Hayrapetyan (PhD student at the Stanford Graduate School of Business), and Hemant Kumar (Ettumanoorappan College, Kerala, India).

Financial Sector Risks Can Hinder Transition to Green Economy

According to HSE and MGIMO economists, increased financial sector risks in developed countries may be associated with a higher carbon footprint in banks' loan portfolios. This is likely due to the fact that in response to an unstable economic situation, banks tend to issue more loans to companies that have a detrimental impact on the environment. Although this might yield short-term profits for the banks, such trends hinder humanity's progress towards achieving a green economy. The paper has been published in Environmental Science and Pollution Research.

Winner of 2023 Nobel Prize in Economics Announced

The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences has awarded the Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel 2023 to Claudia Goldin (Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA), ‘for having advanced our understanding of women’s labour market outcomes.’ According to the Nobel committee, Professor Goldin has uncovered key factors that determine gender differences in the labour market.

Millennials Are Three Times Ahead of Zoomers in the Monetised Creator Economy. Even Boomers Outperform Them. Okay Then…

A group of specialists from the HSE Institute for Cultural Studies, Vitaly Kurennoy, Alexander Suvalko and Maria Figura, have determined two main trends that are actively shaping the image of the creative economy and culture in 2021-2023: the creator economy and the maker economy.

Teaching Masters' Students and Conducting Lectures in English Boost Academic Productivity

HSE researchers have analysed teaching load data at the HSE campus in St Petersburg to investigate the potential impact of teaching on faculty research output. They found that factors such as teaching primarily masters' courses, conducting 20% of lectures in English, and supervising only one doctoral student per year were associated with a greater likelihood of producing more high-quality academic papers. The study has been published in Higher Education Quarterly.

'HSE Paved My Road to Harvard'

Nargiz Mammadova, from Azerbaijan, is a 2022 graduate of the Economics: Research Programme and a finalist of the Global Essay Competition in St. Gallen. As she prepares to start her Master of Public Administration in International Development programme at Harvard in August 2023, Nargiz reflects on her time studying at HSE University during the COVID-19 pandemic, talks about her work for the State Oil Fund of Azerbaijan, and shares an important message for future students.

Income and Cost of Living Distribution Found to Be Similar in Russia and US

Researchers at the HSE Faculty of Economic Sciences Laboratory for Wealth Measurement analysed income and cost of living data at the sub-regional level in Russia (municipalities) and in the US (counties). The study reveals that territorial differences in the cost of living are more pronounced in Russia compared to the United States. However, the distribution of overall income across settlements of varying sizes is quite comparable in both countries. The article has been published in the HSE Economic Journal.