Niveau d'étude
BAC +5
ECTS
4,5 crédits
Composante
Sciences économiques, gestion, mathématiques et informatique
Volume horaire
24h
Période de l'année
Enseignement dixième semestre
Description
The course is a combination of seminars and lectures. The first session is devoted to a general presentation of the course/seminar. The second and third sessions are devoted to a lecture about central banking and monetary policy as well as central bank presentations by students (design, objective, history, recent behaviour, etc.). Students have to pick a central bank (US, EMU, England, Japan, BRICS, North Europe, Swiss, etc.) that they will study and about which they will become the class expert.
Objectifs
This course is about Central Banks, their activities, their mandate, their policy role, and their
relationships with governments and other public authorities. For a few decades, there was broad consensus about Central Banks missions, instruments and institutional framework. Monetary policy was well defined in its theory, its strategy, objectives and instruments. Central banking is now going through a transition. The financial crisis has forced Central Banks into unprecedented interventions both in nature and magnitude. It has brought back their historical responsibility as guardians of financial stability. It has exposed them to criticism and challenges to their expertise and questions to their independence. The purpose of this course is to provide an understanding of the purposes and functions of central banks and the challenges they confront.
Évaluation
Évaluation durant le cours sur des articles de recherche
Pré-requis obligatoires
Money, banking and finance
Compétences visées
Central bank watching
Bibliographie
Gali, J. (2008), Monetary Policy, Inflation and the Business Cycle, Princeton University Press,
224 pages.
Mishkin, F. (2009), Monetary Policy Strategy, The MIT Press, 560 pages.
Walsh, C.E. (2003), Monetary Theory and Policy, Second Edition, The MIT Press,
Cambridge, MA.
Woodford, M. (2003), Interest and Prices: Foundations of a Theory of Monetary Policy, Princeton University Press, 8080 pages.
Ressources pédagogiques
Classe interactive