The Long Journey of Central Bank Communication

Ebook
On sale Oct 01, 2019 | 104 Pages | 9780262356008
A leading economist and former central banker discusses the evolution of central bank communication from secretiveness to transparency and accountability.

Central bank communication has evolved from secretiveness to transparency and accountability—from a reluctance to give out any information at all to the belief in communication as a panacea for effective policy. In this book, Otmar Issing, himself a former central banker, discusses the journey toward transparency in central bank communication. Issing traces the development of transparency, examining the Bank of England as an example of extreme reticence and European Central Bank's President Mario Draghi as a practitioner of effective communication. He argues that the ultimate goal of central bank communication is to make monetary policy more effective, and describes the practice and theory of communication as an evolutionary process. For a long time, the Federal Reserve never made its monetary policy decisions public; the European Central Bank, on the other hand, had to adopt a modern communication strategy from the outset.

Issing discusses the importance of guiding expectations in central bank communication, and points to financial markets as the most important recipients of this communication. He discusses the obligations of accountability and transparency, although he notes that total transparency is a “mirage.” Issing argues that the central message to the public must always be that the stability of a nation's currency is the bank's priority.

Otmar Issing is President of the Center for Financial Studies at Goethe University in Frankfurt. He has been a member of the executive boards of the Bundesbank (German Central Bank) and the European Central Bank (where he was also Chief Economist). He is the author of The Birth of the Euro and Monetary Policy in the Euro Area.

About

A leading economist and former central banker discusses the evolution of central bank communication from secretiveness to transparency and accountability.

Central bank communication has evolved from secretiveness to transparency and accountability—from a reluctance to give out any information at all to the belief in communication as a panacea for effective policy. In this book, Otmar Issing, himself a former central banker, discusses the journey toward transparency in central bank communication. Issing traces the development of transparency, examining the Bank of England as an example of extreme reticence and European Central Bank's President Mario Draghi as a practitioner of effective communication. He argues that the ultimate goal of central bank communication is to make monetary policy more effective, and describes the practice and theory of communication as an evolutionary process. For a long time, the Federal Reserve never made its monetary policy decisions public; the European Central Bank, on the other hand, had to adopt a modern communication strategy from the outset.

Issing discusses the importance of guiding expectations in central bank communication, and points to financial markets as the most important recipients of this communication. He discusses the obligations of accountability and transparency, although he notes that total transparency is a “mirage.” Issing argues that the central message to the public must always be that the stability of a nation's currency is the bank's priority.

Author

Otmar Issing is President of the Center for Financial Studies at Goethe University in Frankfurt. He has been a member of the executive boards of the Bundesbank (German Central Bank) and the European Central Bank (where he was also Chief Economist). He is the author of The Birth of the Euro and Monetary Policy in the Euro Area.