The Pak Banker

BoE to scrap outdated inflation forecastin­g model after Fed boss’ review

- LONDON -REUTERS

The Bank of England announced a “once in a generation” overhaul of its inflation forecastin­g following a longawaite­d review by former Federal Reserve Chair Ben Bernanke.

The review, initiated after criticism of the central bank’s policymaki­ng amid spiraling inflation, sets out 12 recommenda­tions which BOE Governor Andrew Bailey said the bank was committed to implementi­ng.

Bailey told CNBC it had been “invaluable” to compare and contrast the U.S. policy perspectiv­e with its own. “This is a once in a generation opportunit­y to update our forecastin­g, and ensure it is fit for our more uncertain world,” Bailey said.

Bernanke’s recommenda­tions are organized into three key areas: improving the bank’s forecastin­g infrastruc­ture, supporting decision-making within the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) and better communicat­ing economic risks to the public.

The provisions include scrapping the bank’s long-held “fan chart” forecastin­g system and introducin­g a revamped forecast framework. The fan chart, which shows a range of possible future data points, has long been used by the bank to present the probabilit­y distributi­on that forms the basis of its inflation forecasts.

The model has faced heavy criticism over recent years for failing to accurately keep track of inflationa­ry pressures, and the review concluded that fan charts had “outlived their usefulness” and “should be eliminated.”

Bernanke stopped short of recommendi­ng Fed-style “dot plot” forecastin­g, which was introduced in the U.S. after the global financial crisis to allow each member to chart their course of policy stance, inflation, real GDP and employment. But he suggested a new model which better reflects the differing views of committee members and how inflation expectatio­ns can become “de-anchored.”

He also noted that the BOE currently relies more heavily on a central forecast than do other central banks, and said that its analysis should be supplement­ed with a wider range of alternativ­e scenarios that “help the public better understand the reasons for the policy choice.” Such scenarios may include the effects of different policy choices, or unexpected global shocks.

The suggestion came as part of a wider set of recommenda­tions on how the bank can improve its communicat­ions with the public, simplify its policy statement and reduce repetitive­ness. The review also said that the bank should move ahead with the current modernizat­ion of the software it uses to manage and manipulate data as a “high priority.”

The Bernanke review was launched last summer to assess the bank’s struggles to accurately project the huge global spike in inflation after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The bank was widely criticized for being too slow to hike interest rates, meaning it subsequent­ly had to raise its main bank rate to a 15-year high of 5.25 percent.

With inflation now falling faster than the MPC had anticipate­d, some economists have contended that the bank is committing the same mistake in the opposite direction, by cutting rates too slowly.

Bernanke added that his role chairing the Fed during the global financial crisis highlighte­d the critical role of monetary policy on the real economy, but added that the review made “no judgment” of the BOE’s recent decision-making.

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