TY - BOOK
T1 - Greening Monetary Policy
AU - Schoenmaker, Dirk
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - Central banks have already started to look at climate-related risks in the
context of financial stability. Should they also take the carbon intensity of
assets into account in the context of monetary policy? The guiding principle
in the implementation of monetary policy has been ‘market neutrality’,
whereby the central bank buys a proportion of the market portfolio of
available corporate and bank bonds (in addition to government bonds). But
this implies a carbon bias, because capital-intensive companies tend to be
more carbon intensive.
We first review the legal mandate of the Eurosystem. While the primary
objective is price stability, the Treaty on European Union allows the
greening of monetary policy as a secondary objective. We propose a
tilting approach to steer or tilt the allocation of the Eurosystem’s assets
and collateral towards low-carbon sectors, which would reduce the cost
of capital for these sectors relative to high-carbon sectors. This allocation
policy must be designed so it does not affect the effective implementation of
monetary policy.
The working of the tilting approach is calibrated with data on European
corporate and bank bonds. We find that a modest tilting approach could
reduce carbon emissions in the corporate and bank bond portfolio by 44 per
cent and lower the cost of capital of low carbon companies by 4 basis points.
Our findings also suggest that such a low carbon allocation can be done
without undue interference with the transmission mechanism of monetary
policy. Price stability, the primary objective, is, and should remain, the
priority of the Eurosystem.
AB - Central banks have already started to look at climate-related risks in the
context of financial stability. Should they also take the carbon intensity of
assets into account in the context of monetary policy? The guiding principle
in the implementation of monetary policy has been ‘market neutrality’,
whereby the central bank buys a proportion of the market portfolio of
available corporate and bank bonds (in addition to government bonds). But
this implies a carbon bias, because capital-intensive companies tend to be
more carbon intensive.
We first review the legal mandate of the Eurosystem. While the primary
objective is price stability, the Treaty on European Union allows the
greening of monetary policy as a secondary objective. We propose a
tilting approach to steer or tilt the allocation of the Eurosystem’s assets
and collateral towards low-carbon sectors, which would reduce the cost
of capital for these sectors relative to high-carbon sectors. This allocation
policy must be designed so it does not affect the effective implementation of
monetary policy.
The working of the tilting approach is calibrated with data on European
corporate and bank bonds. We find that a modest tilting approach could
reduce carbon emissions in the corporate and bank bond portfolio by 44 per
cent and lower the cost of capital of low carbon companies by 4 basis points.
Our findings also suggest that such a low carbon allocation can be done
without undue interference with the transmission mechanism of monetary
policy. Price stability, the primary objective, is, and should remain, the
priority of the Eurosystem.
UR - https://www.bruegel.org/2019/02/greening-monetary-policy/
M3 - Book
T3 - Working Paper
BT - Greening Monetary Policy
CY - Brussels
ER -