Liquidity Traps, Prudential Policies, and International Spillovers

We present a simple open economy framework to study the transmission channels of monetary and macroprudential policies and evaluate the implications for international spillovers and global welfare. Using an analytical decomposition, we first identify three transmission channels: intertemporal substitution, expenditure switching, and aggregate income. Quantitatively, expenditure switching plays a prominent role for monetary policy, while macroprudential policy operates almost entirely through intertemporal substitution. Turning to the normative analysis, we show that the risk of a liquidity trap generates a monetary policy tradeoff between stabilizing output today and reducing capital flows to lower the likelihood of a future recession. However, leaning against the wind is not necessarily optimal, even in the absence of capital controls. Finally, we argue that contrary to emerging policy concerns, capital controls are not beggar-thy-neighbor and can enhance global macroeconomic stability.

[1]  Kurt Mitman,et al.  Household Heterogeneity and the Transmission of Foreign Shocks , 2019, Journal of International Economics.

[2]  Ṣebnem Kalemli-Özcan,et al.  U.S. Monetary Policy and International Risk Spillovers , 2019 .

[3]  G. Corsetti,et al.  The case for flexible exchange rates after the Great Recession , 2019 .

[4]  Federica Romei,et al.  The Paradox of Global Thrift , 2018, American Economic Review.

[5]  John M. Roberts,et al.  Monetary Policy in a Low Interest Rate World , 2017 .

[6]  Gregory Thwaites,et al.  Step Away from the Zero Lower Bound: Small Open Economies in a World of Secular Stagnation , 2017, Journal of International Economics.

[7]  Adrien Auclert Monetary Policy and the Redistribution Channel , 2017, American Economic Review.

[8]  Anton Korinek Currency Wars or Efficient Spillovers? A General Theory of International Policy Cooperation , 2016, SSRN Electronic Journal.

[9]  M. Uribe,et al.  Downward Nominal Wage Rigidity, Currency Pegs, and Involuntary Unemployment , 2016, Journal of Political Economy.

[10]  Olivier J. Blanchard,et al.  Currency Wars, Coordination, and Capital Controls , 2016, The Asian Monetary Policy Forum.

[11]  Gauti B. Eggertsson,et al.  A Contagious Malady? Open Economy Dimensions of Secular Stagnation , 2016, IMF Economic Review.

[12]  Sushant Acharya,et al.  Liquidity Traps, Capital Flows , 2015, Journal of International Economics.

[13]  Luca Fornaro International Debt Deleveraging , 2015 .

[14]  Anton Korinek,et al.  Liquidity Trap and Excessive Leverage , 2014, SSRN Electronic Journal.

[15]  M. Devereux,et al.  Capital Controls, Global Liquidity Traps, and the International Policy Trilemma , 2013 .

[16]  Pierpaolo Benigno,et al.  Debt Deleveraging and the Exchange Rate , 2012 .

[17]  David E. Cook,et al.  Sharing the Burden: Monetary and Fiscal Responses to a World Liquidity Trap , 2011 .

[18]  P. Lane,et al.  The new open economy macroeconomics: a survey , 2001 .

[19]  Paolo A. Pesenti,et al.  Welfare and Macroeconomic Interdependence , 1997 .

[20]  Crei,et al.  Monetary Policy and Exchange Rate Volatility in a Small Open Economy , 2002 .

[21]  Paul Krugman,et al.  It's Baaack: Japan's Slump and the Return of the Liquidity Trap , 1998 .