McCallum rule


In monetary policy, the McCallum rule specifies a target for the monetary base which could be used by a central bank. The McCallum rule was proposed by Bennett T. McCallum at Carnegie Mellon University's Tepper School of Business. It is an alternative to the well known Taylor rule and performs better during crisis periods.

Rule

The rule gives a target for the monetary base in the next quarter. The target is:
where

Explanation

Let us define the velocity of money, V, by
where: M is the money supply ; and X is the aggregate money traded for goods or services.
Let us define the price level, P, by
where Q is the quantity of goods or services exchanged.
Together, these definitions yield the so-called equation of exchange
Now, define m, v, x, p, and q as the natural logarithms of M, V, X, P, and Q. Then the equation becomes
These quantities are functions of time, t, which we will take to be an integer which counts the quarters of years. So mt means the value of m during the t quarter. The forward difference operator, is defined by
If we apply the forward difference operator, we get
and so
The velocity of money changes due to changes in technology and regulation. McCallum assumes that these changes tend to occur at the same rate over a period of a few years. He averages over four years to get a forecast of the average growth rate of velocity over the foreseeable future. Thus one approximates
The velocity term is not intended to reflect current conditions in the business cycle.
We assume that when the rate of inflation is held near its desired value, for an extended period, then the growth rate of real GDP will be near to its long-run average, And thus that the growth rate of nominal GDP will be close to their sum
However, it is not obvious what that desired value of inflation should be.
McCallum takes the long-run average rate of growth of real GDP to be 3 percent per year which amounts to
on a quarterly basis. He expects the Federal Reserve to choose an inflation target of 2 percent per year which amounts to
on a quarterly basis.
So the target for the monetary base should be given by a rule of the form
where is a correction term which can only depend on information available at time t. The correction term is intended to compensate for current cyclical conditions. It should be positive when recent growth of output and the price level has been slow.
If one takes the correction to be
then the result is McCallum's rule. A large resulting increase in M0 tends to generate or support a rapid rate of increase in broader monetary aggregates and thereby stimulate aggregate demand for goods and services.
The figures used for the monetary base should be the adjusted base as calculated by the Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis. The adjustments serve to take account of changes in legal reserve requirements that alter the quantity of medium-of-exchange money that can be supported by a given quantity of the base.