20297 - MONETARY POLICY
Department of Economics
ROBERTO PEROTTI
Suggested background knowledge
Mission & Content Summary
MISSION
CONTENT SUMMARY
Please note: in addition to the lectures covering the syllabus below, I will try to have three lectures by three invited lecturers (all dates to be defined, we need flexibility to accomodate the schedules of the speakers):
Olivier Blanchard, former Chief Economist of the International Monetary Fund, who will speak on interest rates and public debt
Andrea Filtri, Co-Head of European Equity Research, Mediobanca, who will speak on digital currencies
Philip Lane, current Chied Economist of the European Central Bank, who will speak on current issues at the ECB
Here is the regula syllabus:
Part 1: Monetary policy
1. Nominal and real interest rates. Short and long rates.
2. The Fed and the ECB
3. Money, the monetary base, and the balance sheet of the sectors
4. The money supply process
5. Monetary policy instruments of central banks
6. Monetary poly in practice before the crisis
7. A bit of history
8. Qantitative easing: facts and numbers
9. Unconventional monetary policies: quantitative easing
10 The role of central bank capital
11. The Target system
12. The Modern Monetary Theory
13. An era of low interest rates
Part 2: The money market, financial markets, and the financial crisis
14. The money market
15. The economics of structured finance
16. Credit default swaps
17. The emerging importance of dealer banks
18. Shadow banking
19. The financial crisis and its explanations
Intended Learning Outcomes (ILO)
KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING
- Understand how monetary policy is conducted in the Eurozone and the US
- understand the current debate about monetary policy
- locate and interpret central bank balance sheets and data
- understand the evolution of monetary policy and its debate during the pandemic
- compare mainstream monetary policy with the Modern Monetary Theory and alternative policy proposals
APPLYING KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING
Interpret the actions of monetary policymakers.
Teaching methods
- Face-to-face lectures
- Online lectures
DETAILS
Face-to-face lectures are standard. Online lectures will replace face-to-face lectures depending on the decision of the university administration. Online lectures are live, recorded and made available to students. Students can intervene even during online lectures, either in wiriting or by voice.
Active participation is highly encouraged, in class and online.
Assessment methods
Continuous assessment | Partial exams | General exam | |
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ATTENDING AND NOT ATTENDING STUDENTS
With the purpose of measuring the acquisition of the above-mentioned learning outcomes,the assessment process is based on a written examination (100% of the final grade)
The written exam consists of exercises and/or open questions, aimed at assessingstudents' ability to:
• Apply the analytical tools illustrated during the course.
• Solve simple economic models and explain their implications.
• Identify the economic effects of monetary and fiscal policies.
• Absrib the intuition underlying the main concepts discussed in class
The exam also consists of short statements (true or false) to discuss,aimed at assessing students' ability to:
• Precisely define the main economic variables and concepts.
• Articulate economic reasoning.
• Correctly apply the knowledge and skills acquired duringthe course.
content and weight distribution of those applied to attending students).
Teaching materials
ATTENDING AND NOT ATTENDING STUDENTS
Handouts will be made available before each class on the course BlackBoard