Archive for September 2nd, 2025

Five ‘C’s for Central Bank Research

September 2, 2025

Catherine Mann,  MPC member of Bank of England in this speech at the centenary celebrations of Bank of Mexico points to 5 Cs of central bank research:

Economic research at central banks plays an important role: for the institutions themselves, the economists employed there, and for the decision-makers. Here are 5 ‘Cs’ of research, relevant to central banks but also other institutions with decision-making responsibility in policy and the marketplace: credibility, currency, communication, careers, and change.

Research is the currency of the economics profession, which fundamentally is about understanding the relationships between households, businesses, and financial firms. Good research lends credibility to the institution through more informed decision-making. For the central bank, credibility is crucial to the functioning of monetary policy, its transmission, and monetary policymakers’ capacity to affect output and inflation. The credibility of the institution also depends on investment in this currency of the profession. Investment in staff’s careers who undertake this research implies they have time, resources and guidance to engage in research that supports the policy objectives of the institution.

Research also changes and evolves – new data and methods support progress in the profession and help me as a policymaker to make judgements based on a range of data sources and models. Knowledge-sharing of research across institutions, enabled by conferences like these, encourages innovation.

Finally, credibility, career, currency, and change come together through various forms of communication of that research, as a key ingredient to research quality and decision-making. The Bank of England’s outlets include, among them, internal poster sessions for work in progress, nearly journal-ready staff working papers, and the new Macro Technical Paper series, intended to document models, analysis and conceptual frameworks that underpin monetary policy preparation. Other Bank outlets include the ‘bite-sized’ Bank Overground posts, and importantly, Bank Underground, the staff blog which can challenge – or support – views of the Monetary Policy Committee or the orthodoxy of the profession. Alongside Bank publications, our researchers also publish in top-tier peer-reviewed academic journals, as well as presenting both at Bank-organized and at top academic conferences. And, of course, research at the Bank is often highlighted in policymaker speeches, as I will be doing today.

From data analysis to theoretical modelling, econometric techniques and textual analysis, research at the Bank of England has provided important cross-checks for me – particularly to the baseline forecast that at times could not capture important dynamics such as state-dependencies, non-linearities and asymmetries in economic relationships that underlie the monetary policy transmission mechanism, the importance of the inflation expectations channel, and the dynamics of demand.

This speech will discuss some of the most recent staff research on the UK that informs my policy decision. I will emphasize research on inflation but will also highlight analysis that shows an increasing tension between inflation persistence and weak growth – the trade-off that we currently face in the United Kingdom. I will finish by discussing how this research influences my monetary policy strategy.

EV Policies and Two-Wheeler EV Adoption: Evidence from Indian States

September 2, 2025

Team of RBI researchers (Atal Singh, Satyam Kumar, Abhyuday Harsh and Tista Tiwari) analyse EV adoption across Indian States:

With nearly three-fourths of vehicle registrations in India comprising two-wheelers (2W) in 2024-25, it is imperative that any initiative aimed at promoting electric vehicles (EVs) must focus on the adoption of 2W-EVs to meet the country’s decarbonisation goals. In this context, this paper empirically investigates the impact of state-level EV promotion policies on the adoption of 2W-EVs.

Highlights:

    • Supportive policies at state level (such as financial incentives, tax exemptions, and investments in charging infrastructure) drive the adoption of 2W-EVs.
    • Regional disparity exists in adoption rates, with southern and western states exhibiting higher adoption rates, partly due to better charging infrastructure and the early development of EV policies.
    • Strong charging infrastructure, even with moderate policy support, can enhance the adoption of 2W-EVs.

A Teacher Writes to Students Series (52): Listen to Kolodko-5

September 2, 2025

A Teacher Writes to Students Series (52): Listen to Kolodko-5
Annavajhula J C Bose, PhD
Department of Economics (Retd.), SRCC, DU

(more…)

20 Years of Jackson Hole Conference and Rajan’s paper on financial development

September 2, 2025

It is really rare for an economics conference to make it to any headlines. Jackson Hole conference organised by Kansas City Fed is one such rare conference which not just makes headlines but its discussions shape economic policy and research in future. The conference started in 1978 and just held its 47th edition.

In its 47 years history, the 2005 edition stands out.  The conference was  held to celebrate legacy of Alan Greenspan,the chair of Federal Reserve for 18 years.   Greenspan was credited for economic growth and development of US amidst multiple shocks. While most papers chose to largely celebrate Greenspan legacy, one paper looked at things differently.

Raghuram Rajan, then chief economist at IMF presented a paper titled as:  Has Financial Development made the world riskier?   Rajan said while there has been financial development in the last 30 years it has also created new risks where investment managers were taking higher unseen risks. Rajan’s paper led to an interesting discussion leding to comparing the findings as luddite and London Millennium bridge. We know how the story played out in 2008 crisis.

My piece in Financial Express on  20 years of Rajan’s paper.

 

 


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