EconoMonitor

The Kapali Carsi

Turkish monetary policy: Whatever works

Below is my Hurriyet Daily News column for this week, which you can also read at the Daily News website. I continue with my cheesy titles, and this week’s is yet another movie homage. Here’s how the thought came to me:


And here is the original:

My gratitude to Woody Allen (or rather whoever did this poster) for having six names on the poster- exactly the number of Monetary Policy Committee members. And who else could it be but the Governor himself in Larry David‘s shoes. Speaking of Larry David, my friends keep telling me that I have to watch “Curb Your Enthusiasm“. especially as a Seinfeld fan. Any thoughts on that? I would especially love to hear from fellow Seinfeldees:)

And BTW, if you are at the Central Bank, please don’t use this little joke as an excuse to deny my application for one of the coveted seats at the Bank’s monthly meeting with economists next week. Normally, I wouldn’t go, but a client would like to be briefed on Turkish monetary policy. So I am hoping I haven’t pissed anyone off in Ulus, Ankara. After all, we are all having a good laugh, right?:)

I have quite a few things to add to the column, so there will be  a proper addendum later in the day or tomorrow, but before that, I should mention my pride and joy: Thanks to a reader, I know that I am not the only one talking about holes and drains :) I submitted my piece to my editor Friday night, so I am “proud” to say I was first!:) And I am experiencing the “joy” of being followed by a Nobel prize winner, although I would have to agree with my reader that  “compared with Krugman’s, [my] argument still lacks rigour (read sesame street vids)”  I am not surprised he has more rigor: After all, he is, well, Krugman, and I am, well, an unemployed economist, although I would have to say that technically, I am out of the labor force:)…

Anyway, I have talked way too much, so on to the column:

 

There are two faucets and a drain in a pool. One of the faucets can fill the pool in two hours, the other in five. The drain can empty the pool in four hours. How long will it take for the pool to fill up if it is one third full to start with?

I was completely “conpuzzled” by these problems at primary school. Not that I was bad at math, but I just couldn’t figure out why anyone in her right mind would not plug the drains if she wanted to fill up the pool in the first place.

After all these years, I am faced with the same problem again. The Central Bank of Turkey has been selling its foreign exchange reserves to protect the lira, but then coming up with ingenious schemes to collect them. For example, it is allowing banks — the very ones to which it has been selling this foreign currency — to maintain their lira required reserves at the Bank in foreign currency.

With dollars being filled and drained at the same time, it isn’t a big surprise that this method has not been very effective. The Bank sold about $1.5 billion on Tuesday, of which $750 million was the daily auction and the rest the Bank’s first direct intervention since 2006. However, by the end of the day, the lira had barely moved.

Since increasing the supply of foreign currency has not worked, the Bank has now turned to domestic currency. By raising the overnight lending rate from 9 to 12.5 percent (8 to 12 percent for primary dealers) at Thursday’s rates meeting, the Bank has provided itself the necessary room to squeeze lira liquidity.

The resulting higher overnight rate will, in turn, make it more expensive to short the lira. Since the borrowing rate was kept at 5 percent, the wider window has increased volatility as well, which would further deter speculative flows. However, if the Central Bank is aiming to strengthen the lira with the familiar supply-demand mechanism, it may not have as much luck.

While banks are extremely dependent on the Central Bank for liquidity, they may respond to a liquidity squeeze by selling off their government bonds. The result would be a bloodbath in the short end of the yield curve rather than a stronger lira.

But if tightening domestic liquidity doesn’t work, the Bank is likely to pull other tricks out of its hat, as Central Bank Gov. Erdem Başçı has recently hinted. This line of thinking is reminiscent of Nasreddin Hodja trying to ferment the Akşehir Lake with a cup of yoghurt.

By telling the doubters “what if it works”, the wise Hodja is noting his extremely asymmetric cost-benefit structure: If the fermenting doesn’t work, he will lose only his cup of yoghurt, but if it does, he’ll have a lake of yoghurt.

Unfortunately, the Central Bank does not have that luxury. It needs reserves for the real tough times, in case the Euro Area goes bust, and banks’ higher funding costs will be reflected in credit rates, exacerbating the slowdown in economic activity.

Luckily, the Bank finally adopted a hawkish tone with regard to inflation in its one-pager accompanying the rates decision. If they continue in this vein in this week’s Inflation Report and next week’s monthly meeting with economists, they could help the lira for once.

Sunday, October 23, 2011

One Response to “Turkish monetary policy: Whatever works”

Most Read | Featured | Popular

Blogger Spotlight

Edward Hugh Don't Shoot the Messenger

Edward is a macro economist, who specializes in growth and productivity theory, demographic processes and their impact on macro performance, and the underlying dynamics of migration flows. Edward is based in Barcelona, and is currently engaged in research on aging, longevity, fertility and migration, and the impact of all of these on economic growth.

Economics Blog Aggregator

Our favorite economics blogs aggregated.