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Monetary and Fiscal Policy: Safeguarding Stability and Trust

Instructor  Micky Midha
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Learning Objectives

  • Describe main issues in identifying and measuring climate-related financial risks.
  • Identify unique data needs inherent in the climate-related risks and describe candidate methodologies that could be used to analyze these types of data.
  • Describe current and developing methodologies for measuring climate-related financial risks employed by banks and supervisors.
  • Compare and contrast climate-measuring methodologies utilized by banks, regulators, and third-party providers.
  • Identify strengths and weaknesses of the main types of measurement approaches.
  • Assess gaps and challenges in designing a modeling framework to capture climate-related financial risk.
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1) Channels of Fiscal and Monetary Policy Influence

Fiscal and monetary policies are two key economic tools used by governments and central banks to influence macroeconomic stability, financial markets, and overall economic activity. While they are interdependent, they operate through distinct channels:

Overlapping & Interdependent Channels

While fiscal and monetary policies function through distinct mechanisms, they often interact in complex ways:

  • A loose fiscal policy (high spending, low taxes) may require tight monetary policy (higher interest rates) to prevent inflation.
  • Monetary policy decisions (interest rates, exchange rates) affect government borrowing costs and fiscal sustainability.
  • Public debt from fiscal policy influences financial systems, affecting bond markets, yield curves, and international capital flows.

Region of Stability in terms of Fiscal and Monetary Policy
Stances

The “region of stability” is a conceptual framework introduced in the report that defines the set of fiscal and monetary policy combinations that promote
macroeconomic and financial stability. It represents a balance where policies neither overheat the economy nor cause financial instability.

  • Inside the Region of Stability:
    • Fiscal policy supports growth without excessive deficits or unsustainable debt accumulation.
    • Monetary policy maintains price stability and financial stability while providing sufficient liquidity.
    • The economy experiences low inflation, sustainable debt levels, and controlled financial risks.
  • Approaching the Boundaries:
    • Expansionary fiscal policies (large deficits) or overly accommodative
    • monetary policies (low interest rates) increase inflationary pressures and financial market vulnerabilities.
    • Monetary tightening in response to inflation can increase debt servicing costs, leading to fiscal strain.
    • The boundaries of stability vary by country, and their precise quantification is difficult. Additionally, these boundaries are not fixed and can shift due to technological developments, financial landscape changes, or external shocks such as geopolitical crises and pandemics.
    • Testing the boundaries of stability can trigger painful economic outcomes, making it crucial for policymakers to maintain safety margins in both fiscal and monetary decisions.
  • Drifting Outside the Region:
    • Excessive monetary easing fuels asset bubbles and inflation.
    • Persistent fiscal deficits and high public debt create risks of sovereign default, financial instability, and currency depreciation.
    • Extreme policy imbalances lead to loss of trust in institutions, economic downturns, and financial crises.
    • When fiscal policy is pushed too far (e.g., prolonged debt accumulation), monetary policy adjustments (such as interest rate hikes) can create conflicts, leading to economic instability.
    • Regulation and foreign exchange interventions can alter the boundaries of stability, affecting how fiscal and monetary policies interact.

Monetary and fiscal policies must complement each other to ensure stability. If they move outside the “region of stability,” risks like inflation, sovereign debt crises, and financial instability can emerge. To maintain stability, policymakers need to recognize the limits of demand-driven growth strategies and ensure sufficient safety margins in both fiscal and monetary policies.

2) Consequences of Breaching the “Regions of Stability”

As mentioned earlier, the “region of stability” refers to the set of macroeconomic conditions where fiscal and monetary policies interact to maintain financial stability, sustainable economic growth, and low inflation. When these boundaries are breached, economies face severe consequences that vary across advanced economies (AEs) and emerging market economies (EMEs). Over time, these consequences have evolved due to structural economic shifts, policy adjustments, and financial globalization.

A. Consequences in Advanced Economies (AEs)

  • Economic and Financial Instability
    • Breaching stability led to high inflation, stagnation, and financial crises.
    • A historical example includes the high inflation of the 1970s, which required aggressive monetary tightening (e.g., the Volcker disinflation).
    • The Great Financial Crisis (GFC) of 2007–2009 showed how prolonged
      loose monetary policy contributed to financial fragility by inflating credit
      and asset bubbles.
    • After the GFC, central banks kept interest rates low and expanded their
      balance sheets significantly to support the economy. However, this pushed economies closer to the limits of stability even before the COVID-19 pandemic.
    • The COVID-19 pandemic intensified these vulnerabilities by increasing both public and private debt, contributing to heightened financial instability.
  • Policy Constraints & Loss of Effectiveness
    • Over time, policy traction weakens as economies push against the stability boundaries. Once the region of stability is breached, monetary policy faces a trade-off between controlling inflation and supporting economic growth.
    • After financial crises, interest rate cuts become less effective when rates are already at historical lows.
    • High public debt restricts fiscal responses, as further debt accumulation
      may lead to unsustainable levels, reducing room for maneuvering and
      policy flexibility.
    • The interaction between monetary and fiscal policy creates self-reinforcing effects—low rates reduce borrowing constraints, encouraging governments to accumulate even more debt.
    • When debt and inflation levels rise, policymakers lose autonomy and must take extreme measures, often under external constraints (e.g., IMF bailouts, ECB interventions in Europe).
  • Loss of Trust and Market Volatility
    • Higher debt levels make monetary normalization harder—as seen with central banks holding large government debt portfolios post-pandemic.
    • When economic policies fail to maintain stability, public confidence in policymakers erodes.
    • This loss of trust leads to higher market volatility, reduced investor confidence, and increased uncertainty.
    • Example: The political pressures against fiscal austerity in several AEs have complicated post-crisis recovery efforts, especially when high debt burdens limit policy flexibility.

B. Shift in policy priorities in Advanced Economies (AEs)

  • Economic and Financial Instability

The evolution of monetary and fiscal policy can be categorized into two major phases before the COVID-19 pandemic. These phases mark a shift from inflation concerns to financial imbalances as the dominant challenge.

  • Phase 1: 1960s to Mid-1980s – Inflation and Policy Overreach :
    • Macroeconomic management in this period was based on the belief that policymakers could fine-tune the economy through fiscal and monetary channels to stabilize unemployment and inflation.
    • The assumption was that active demand management could prevent economic downturns while maintaining price stability. However, this overconfidence led to economic overheating.
    • Persistent fiscal expansion contributed to rising inflation, requiring
      monetary tightening.
    • Key consequence: The Great Inflation of the 1970s, which forced
      policymakers to raise interest rates sharply to combat price pressures.
    • The result was high inflation, high interest rates, and a surge in public
      debt,
      which created a pressing need for a policy shift toward price
      stability.
    • Debt accumulation and fiscal imbalances during this period limited
      future policy flexibility.
  • Phase 2: Mid-1980s to Pre-Pandemic – Financial Imbalances and Risk-Taking:
    • By the mid-1980s, financial systems shifted from being government-led to market-led, a period characterized by financial liberalization.
    • Globalization played a key role in reshaping economic policy—in
      particular, cheaper labor in emerging markets (e.g., China) contributed
      to a long period of low inflation.
    • Testing the boundaries of stability shifted from inflationary pressures
      to financial imbalances,
      such as:
      • Excessive risk-taking behavior in financial markets.
      • Rapid expansion of credit and asset prices (housing, stocks, and
        bonds).
      • Greater reliance on debt-fueled growth instead of sustainable supply-
        side improvements.
    • Inflation-induced recessions were replaced by financial recessions, which had a longer-lasting impact on economic growth.
    • In response to economic downturns, central banks lowered interest rates significantly, but when the economy recovered, monetary policy did not tighten as much because inflation remained low.
    • This low-interest-rate environment encouraged further debt accumulation, making public and private debt levels rise to historic highs.
    • 2007–2009 Global Financial Crisis (GFC) marked a turning point, as financial instability became the dominant risk rather than inflation.
    • After the GFC, many economies struggled to manage rising debt burdens and increased financial fragility, leading to an overreliance on monetary stimulus to support growth.
  • COVID-19 and the Further Shift in Policy Priorities:
    • The COVID-19 pandemic intensified many of the trends seen in Phase 2, pushing economies even closer to the boundaries of stability.
    • Governments implemented large fiscal stimulus programs to offset the
      economic damage from lockdowns, leading to a sharp rise in public debt.
    • Monetary policy remained ultra-loose, with central banks expanding their balance sheets to unprecedented levels, further fueling financial imbalances.
    • The post-pandemic economic rebound led to rapid inflation, exacerbated by supply chain disruptions and pent-up consumer demand.
    • Debt levels, both public and private, reached record highs, making
      economies more vulnerable to financial crises and limiting the effectiveness of future policy responses.

C. Consequences in Emerging Market Economies (EMEs)

  • Sudden Capital Outflows & Currency Depreciation
    • EMEs have a much narrower region of stability than AEs, meaning policy errors result in faster and more severe crises.
    • Boundary breaches often lead to:
      • Massive capital outflows.
      • Sharp currency depreciations.
      • Higher inflation due to import costs.
      • Increased financial instability.
    • Exchange rate dependency makes EMEs highly vulnerable to external shocks, especially in fixed exchange rate regimes.
    • Examples include Latin America’s debt crisis (1980s), Mexico’s Tequila crisis (1994), and the Asian financial crisis (1997-1998).
    • Exchange rate collapses are a common consequence, as seen in the 1997
      Asian Financial Crisis and the 2018 Argentina crisis, where weak market
      confidence led to sharp currency depreciations and capital flight.
  • Heightened Sensitivity to Global Conditions
    • Due to weaker financial markets, EMEs are more dependent on foreign capital.
    • This means that even small shifts in U.S. monetary policy (e.g., interest rate hikes) can cause large-scale economic distress in EMEs.
    • The Volcker disinflation of the 1980s triggered Latin America’s debt crisis as U.S. interest rate hikes caused capital flight.
  • Evolving Policy Responses
    • As financial crises become increasingly global, EMEs have been forced to
      strengthen policy tools. to mitigate the above effects. They focus more on:
      • Flexible exchange rates.
      • Higher foreign exchange reserves.
      • Stronger inflation-targeting frameworks.
    • However, they remain highly vulnerable to global shocks, especially in times of financial crises.
    • During the COVID-19 pandemic, Latin America implemented monetary
      tightening earlier than AEs to avoid the spillover effects of AE policies.

D. Evolution of Consequences over Time

  • Long-Term Drift Toward Instability
    • Policy decisions over decades have gradually pushed economies toward the boundaries of stability.
    • Each policy action may seem justified in isolation, but cumulatively, they increase financial fragility.
    • Before COVID-19, both monetary and fiscal policy had already stretched
      these boundaries.
      • Central banks had kept interest rates low and expanded balance
        sheets.
      • Governments had accumulated high public debt with persistent
        deficits.
  • Policy Adjustments & Recovery Efforts
    • When crises occur, economies attempt to return to stability, but recovery
      paths differ between AEs and EMEs.
    • AEs usually rely on:
      • Tightening monetary policy (e.g., raising interest rates to curb
        inflation).
      • Fiscal consolidation (reducing deficits and stabilizing public debt).
    • EMEs often require:
      • More aggressive policy interventions, including capital controls and
        exchange rate adjustments.
  • Learning from Past Mistakes
    • Policymakers have developed more sophisticated tools to manage stability.
    • However, the dynamics of global finance keep evolving, creating new challenges and intertemporal trade-offs.
    • The financial liberalization of the mid-1980s to the 2000s showed that low inflation does not always mean stability—instead, financial recessions became the dominant crisis type.

Conclusion

Breaching the region of stability reshapes economies for decades. While AEs and EMEs have learned from past crises, the complexity of global finance ensures that new risks continue to emerge. The key challenge remains: how to balance economic growth with long-term stability without over-relying on monetary and fiscal tools that may eventually weaken the foundation of economic resilience.

3) High Public Debt Levels

The BIS Annual Economic Report 2023 highlights that rising public debt levels pose significant risks to both macroeconomic stability and financial markets. These risks become more pronounced when fiscal and monetary policies operate at the limits of the “region of stability”, potentially triggering economic crises.

A. Key Risks of High Public Debt Levels

B. How High Debt Levels Drive Fiscal-Monetary Policy Tensions

High public debt creates a conflict between fiscal and monetary authorities, as both policies have different objectives:


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