4 research outputs found
An Independent Review of Monetary Policy and Institutions in Norway
The Centre for Monetary Economics (CME) at the Norwegian School of Management BI has for the third time invited a committee of economists for Norges Bank Watch, with the objective to evaluate the monetary-policy regime in Norway and Norges Bank’s conduct of monetary policy. The new committee for Norges Bank Watch 2002 consists of Professor Lars E.O. Svensson (chair), Princeton University, Chief Economist Kjetil Houg, Alfred Berg, Doctorate Student Haakon O.Aa. Solheim, Norwegian School of Management BI, and Professor Erling Steigum, Norwegian School of Management BI. The aim of Norges Bank Watch is to contribute to the general discussion on monetary policy and institutions among the political system, the academic community and other interested parties. Two years ago, Norges Bank Watch 2000 suggested that the Bank’s actual interpretation of its stable exchange-rate mandate should be formalized as a flexible inflation-targeting regime. In March 2001, the government introduced a formal inflation target regime. As was the case in last year’s report, we do not have the ambitions to suggest another major change of the system, but we hope to highlight important aspects of the present regime and we recommend a number of possible improvements of the regime.
“Large” vs. “small” players: A closer look at the dynamics of speculative attacks
What is the role of “large players” like hedge funds and other highly leveraged institutions in speculative attacks? In recent theoretical work, large players may induce an attack by an early move, providing information to smaller agents. In contrast, many observers argue that large players are in the rear. We propose a model that allows both the large player to move early in order to induce speculation by small players, or wait so as to benefit from a high interest rate prior to the attack. Using data on net positions of “large” (foreigners) and “small” (locals) players,we find that large players moved last in three attacks on the Norwegian krone (NOK) during the1990s: The ERM-crisis of 1992, the NOK-pressure in 1997, and after the Russian moratorium in1998. In 1998 there was a contemporaneous attack on the Swedish krona (SEK) in which large players moved early. Interest rates did not increase in Sweden so there was little to gain by a delayed attack.Speculative attacks, microstructure, international finance, large players
Norges Bank Watch 2002
The Centre for Monetary Economics (CME) at the Norwegian School of Management
BI has for the third time invited a committee of economists for Norges Bank Watch,
with the objective to evaluate the monetary-policy regime in Norway and Norges
Bank’s conduct of monetary policy. The committee for Norges Bank Watch 2002
consists of Professor Lars E.O. Svensson (chair), Princeton University, Chief Economist
Kjetil Houg, Alfred Berg, Doctorate Student Haakon O.Aa. Solheim, Norwegian
School of Management BI, and Professor Erling Steigum, Norwegian School of Management
BI. The committee met in Oslo in June 2002, had discussions with key officials
at Norges Bank and the Ministry of Finance, and has worked on its report until
September 2002