Monetary Policy Report - April 2020

Autor o Editor
Equipo Técnico
Gerencia Técnica
Vargas-Herrera, Hernando
Subgerencia de Política Monetaria e Información Económica
Ospina, Juan José
Departamento de programación e inflación
Huertas-Campos, Carlos Alfonso
Sección de Inflación
Cobo-Serna, Adolfo León
Caicedo-García, Edgar
Cote-Barón, Juan Pablo
Martínez-Cortés, Nicolás
Rojas, Carlos Daniel
Pulido, Karen
Sección de Programación Macroeconómica
Garavito-Acosta, Aarón Levi
Calderón, Luis Hernán
González, Camilo
Salazar-Diaz, Andrea
Galeano, Franky
Asesores e Investigador asociado del Departamento de Programación e Inflación
Gaitan, Celina
Restrepo-Ángel, Sergio
Parra-Amado, Daniel
Departamento de Modelos Macroeconómicos
Hamann, Franz
Sección de Pronóstico
Pérez-Amaya, Julián Mauricio
Romero-Chamorro, José Vicente
Forero, Santiago
Moreno, Nicolás
De Castro, Marcela
Naranjo, Sara
Sección de Desarrollo de Modelos y Capacidades
Guarín-López, Alexander
Anzola, Cesar
Méndez-Vizcaíno, Juan Camilo

Starting in October 2019, the quarterly Inflation Report produced by the technical staff of the Central Bank will be known as the Monetary Policy Report. The document, which is used for the technical staff´s monetary policy recommendation, will be published on the working day after the meeting of the BDBR in January, April, July, and October, simultaneously with the Board minutes.

Fecha de publicación

Banco de la República (the Central Bank of Colombia) is required by the Constitution to maintain the purchasing power of Colombia’s currency in coordination with general economic policy1. In order to fulfill this mandate, the Central Bank of Colombia’s Board of Directors (hereafter BDBR) has adopted a flexible inflation targeting scheme, by which monetary policy actions (MP) seek to lead inflation to a specific target and achieve maximum levels of sustainable output and employment.

The flexibility of this scheme allows the BDBR to maintain an adequate balance between reaching its inflation target and smoothing output and employment fluctuations around their sustainable growth paths. The BDBR has set a 3.0% inflation target based on annual change in the consumer price index (CPI). In the short term, inflation may be affected by factors outside of monetary policy control, such as changes in food prices due to climate-related phenomena. To factor in this reality, the BDBR has also set a ±1 percentage point range outside its inflation target (i.e., 3.0 ± 1 pp). This range does not represent a monetary policy target, but rather reflects the fact that inflation can fluctuate around the target and will not always be equal to 3.0%.

The main instrument of the BDBR to control inflation is the policy interest rate (overnight repo rate, or benchmark interest rate). Given that monetary policy actions take time to have their full effect on the economy and inflation2, the BDBR assesses the inflation forecast and inflation expectations vis-à-vis the inflation target, as well as the current situation and outlook of the economy, in order to determine their value.

The BDBR meets once a month, producing monetary policy decisions in eight of its meetings (January, March, April, June, July, September, October, and December). In principle, no such decisions are made in the BDBR’s four remaining meetings (February, May, August, and November)3. At the end of the meetings in which monetary policy decisions are produced, a press release is published and a press conference held by the Governor of the Central Bank and the Minister of Finance. The minutes of the meeting describing the positions that led the BDBR to its decision are published on the following business day. Additionally, the Monetary Policy Report (MPR)4, produced by the Central Bank’s technical staff, is published in January, April, July, and October, together with the minutes. On the Wednesday of the week following the Board meeting, the Governor clarifies concerns about the minutes, and the Bank’s Deputy Technical Governor presents the MPR. This dissemination scheme5 seeks to deliver relevant and up-to-date information to contribute to better decision-making by the agents of the economy.

1 Political Constitution of Colombia (1991), Article 373 and Decision C-481/99 of the Constitutional Court.

2 For further details, see M. Jalil and L. Mahadeva (2010). “Transmission Mechanisms of Monetary Policy in Colombia”, Universidad Externado de Colombia, Faculty of Finance, Government, and International Relations, ed. 1, vol. 1, no. 69, October.

3 A Board Member may request an extraordinary meeting at any time to make MP decisions.

4 Formerly known as the Inflation Report.

5 The current communication scheme was approved by the BDBR in its August 2019 meeting.