Saturday, October 30, 2010

monetary policy

As stated, monetary policy is the government policy on money supply and credit creation. there two major types of monetary policies, contractionary or tight monetary policy and expansionary or easy monetary policy. inspite of the two consists of quantitative and qualitative instruments.

Quantitaves measures are:

1. Open Market Operations (OMO) - selling (inflation) and buying (recession) short term securities.
2. Variations of Legal Reserve Requirements - increase (inflation) and decrease ( recession) reserve requirements.
3. Funding - selling (inflation) and buying (recession) long term bonds.
4. Discount rate or bank rate - inrease (inflation) and decrease (recession) discount rate.
5. Interest Rate Policy - increase (inflation) and decrease (recession) interest rate.

Qualitative measures are:
For Inflation ;
1. Selective credit control -includes hire - purchase regulations (banking system may fix minimum down payment and maximum repaying period) and capital issue control ( CB issue directives to banks to give loans only to productive purposes)
2. Moral suasion - CB persuade the commercial banks to restrict their lending policy.
3. Special directives - CB set up directives and instructions to banks to reduce the volume of loans given to clients.

For Recession ;
1. Allowing and supporting the banks and financial institutions to advance credit to households and firms for productive and non-productive purposes.

Let us apply this in the REAL WORLD.
Aug. 14 (Bloomberg) -- Malaysia, which has raised interest rates three times this year, has “appropriately” shifted its monetary policy to support growth and keep inflation in check, the International Monetary Fund said.
The policy of a “measured pace” of rate increases “will help prevent financial imbalances in an environment of low interest rates while still supporting aggregate demand and limiting the drag on growth from needed fiscal consolidation,” the IMF board said in a statement e-mailed today following a July 30 meeting on the country’s economy.
Stronger manufacturing buoyed growth across Asia in the first half of 2010, prompting Malaysia and India to lead regional policy makers in raising borrowing costs. Malaysian central bank Governor Zeti Akhtar Aziz has raised the benchmark interest rate to 2.75 percent this year from a record low as economic growth surged to the fastest pace in at least a decade in the first quarter.
The IMF, whose discussions were based on the annual staff report on Malaysia’s policies, also said directors “took note of the staff’s assessment that the ringgit appears to be weaker than its equilibrium level in real effective terms.”
The Washington-based IMF predicts “favorable” near-term prospects in the Southeast Asian country, with growth of 6.7 percent this year and 5.3 percent in 2011.
--Editors: Christopher Wellisz, Paul Tighe

when we looked upon this, Malaysia economy is, as we know, is in the inflation condition. for your information, when the interest rate is high, this will lead to the strengthen of the currency, which make the value of the currency is actually appreciate which subsequently leads to the higher cost of production domestically. Thus, importation increase.

Is this Malaysian current policy is good? drop your comment please :

No comments:

Post a Comment