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※ 번역할 언어 선택

Governor Frederic S. Mishkin
At the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, New York, New York
January 11, 2008

Monetary Policy Flexibility, Risk Management, and Financial Disruptions

In my remarks today, I would like to consider the rationale for greater flexibility in monetary policy during periods of financial disruptions. Before doing so, however, I would like to make not just one, but two important disclaimers. First, as usual, my remarks reflect only my own views and are not intended to reflect those of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) or of anyone else associated with the Federal Reserve System. And second, my comments today should not be viewed as suggesting what policy actions I would be likely to advocate at the next FOMC meeting; rather, my purpose here is to discuss at a general level what can be said about the appropriate framework for monetary policy when we face a financial disruption of the sort that we have seen recently.

I have two reasons for making the second disclaimer. First, in some circumstances, the appropriate near-term path for policy rates can be highly uncertain and may well evolve right up until the time of the meeting, depending on the implications of the incoming data. Second, >as I noted in a speech in late November, I think there is too much focus on what decision will be made about the federal funds rate target at the next FOMC meeting (Mishkin, 2007e). What is important for pricing most financial assets is the path of monetary policy, not the particular action taken at a single meeting. For these reasons, I hope the recent enhancements to the Federal Reserve’s communication strategy--especially the greater prominence of the macroeconomic projections of FOMC participants--will help shift attention toward our medium-term objectives and our approach in meeting these objectives.1

In particular, the Congress has given the Federal Reserve a specific mandate (often referred to as the dual mandate) of fostering the objectives of price stability and maximum employment. Therefore, when the economy faces a disruption in financial markets, monetary policy must aim at balancing the risks to both economic growth and inflation. In the remainder of this speech, I will elaborate a bit further about why financial market disruptions can pose significant risks to the macroeconomy. Then I will explain how the science of monetary policy can help provide a conceptual framework for a systematic approach to managing these risks, and I will briefly discuss how that framework can be useful for understanding the course of Federal Reserve policy over the past few months.

Financial Disruptions and Macroeconomic Risk
Before considering the appropriate policy response to strains in financial markets, it is essential to consider the sources of these strains and the potential consequences for the macroeconomy. In general, the U.S. financial system is an efficient mechanism for channeling funds to individuals or corporations with worthy investment opportunities, because the financial markets are highly competitive and provide strong incentives for collecting and processing information.

Although financial markets and institutions deal with large volumes of information, some of this information is by nature asymmetric; that is, one party to a financial contract (typically the lender) has less accurate information about the likely distribution of outcomes than does the other party (typically the borrower).2 Historically, banks and other financial intermediaries have played a major role in reducing the asymmetry of information, partly because these firms tend to have long-term relationships with their clients. Recent years have witnessed the development of new types of financial institutions and of new markets for trading financial products, and these innovations have had the potential (not always realized) to contribute to the efficient flow of information.

The continuity of this information flow is crucial to the process of price discovery--that is, the ability of market participants to assess the fundamental worth of each financial asset. During periods of financial distress, however, information flows may be disrupted and price discovery may be impaired. As a result, such episodes tend to generate greater uncertainty, which contributes to higher credit spreads and greater reluctance to engage in market transactions.

As I noted in another recent speech, financial disruptions are associated with two distinct types of risk: valuation risk and macroeconomic risk (Mishkin, 2007d). Valuation risk refers to the extent that market participants become more uncertain about the returns on a specific asset, especially in cases where the security is highly complex and its underlying creditworthiness is relatively opaque. In recent months, for example, this type of risk has been central to the repricing of many structured credit products, as investors have struggled to understand how potential losses in subprime mortgages might filter through the various layers of securities linked to these loans.

While valuation risk is relevant for individual investors, monetary policymakers are concerned with macroeconomic risk. In particular, strains in financial markets can spill over to the broader economy and have adverse consequences on output and employment. Furthermore, an economic downturn tends to generate even greater uncertainty about asset values, which could initiate an adverse feedback loop in which the financial disruption restrains economic activity; such a situation could lead to greater uncertainty and increased financial disruption, causing a further deterioration in macroeconomic activity, and so on. In the academic literature, this phenomenon is generally referred to as the financial accelerator (Bernanke and Gertler, 1989; Bernanke, Gertler, and Gilchrist, 1996, 1999).

The quality of balance sheets of households and firms comprise a key element of the financial accelerator mechanism, because some of the assets of each borrower may serve as collateral for its liabilities. The use of collateral helps mitigate the problem of asymmetric information, because the borrower’s incentive not to engage in excessive risk-taking is strengthened by the threat of losing the collateral: If a default does occur, the lender can take title to the borrower’s collateral and thereby recover some or all of the value of the loan. However, a macroeconomic downturn tends to diminish the value of many forms of collateral, thereby exacerbating the impact of frictions in credit markets and reinforcing the propagation of the adverse feedback loop.

Risk Management and the Science of Monetary Policy
Given that a financial market disruption can pose significant risks to the macroeconomy, risk management is crucial in formulating the appropriate response of monetary policy. Unfortunately, most existing studies of optimal monetary policy have completely abstracted from considerations of macroeconomic risk, because these studies use specific formulations or approximations which imply that the design of the optimal monetary policy does not depend on the magnitude or direction of uncertainty facing the economy--an implication referred to as certainty equivalence.

To elaborate on these issues, it’s necessary for me to proceed at a somewhat more technical level, but I promise to use plain English again later in the speech. In particular, the standard textbook approach to analyzing optimal monetary policy utilizes a linear-quadratic (LQ) framework, in which the equations describing the dynamic behavior of the economy are linear and the objective function specifying the goals of policy is quadratic. For example, in light of the dual mandate, monetary policy is often characterized as seeking to minimize a loss function comprising the squared value of the inflation gap (that is, actual inflation minus desired inflation) and the squared value of the output gap (that is, actual output minus potential output).

Under these assumptions, the optimal policy is certainty equivalent: This policy can be characterized by a linear time-invariant response to each shock, and the magnitude of these responses does not depend on the variances or any other aspect of the probability distribution of the shocks. In such an environment, optimal monetary policy does not focus on risk management. Furthermore, when financial market participants and wage and price setters are relatively forward-looking, the optimal policy under commitment is characterized by considerable inertia.3

Indeed, the actual course of monetary policy over the past quarter-century has typically been very smooth in the United States as well as in many other industrial economies.
For example, the Federal Reserve has usually adjusted the federal funds rate in increments of 25 or 50 basis points (that is, 1/4 or 1/2 percentage point) and sharp reversals in the funds rate path have been rare. Numerous empirical studies have characterized monetary policy using Taylor-style rules in which the policy rate responds to the inflation gap and the output gap; these studies have generally found that the fit of the regression equation is improved by including a lagged interest rate that reflects the smoothness of the typical adjustment pattern.4

While an LQ framework may provide a reasonable approximation to how monetary policy should operate under fairly normal circumstances, this approach is less likely to be adequate for thinking about monetary policy when the risk of poor economic performance is unusually high. First, the dynamic behavior of the economy may well exhibit nonlinearities, at least in response to some shocks (Hamilton, 1989; Kim and Nelson, 1999; and Kim, Morley, and Piger, 2005). Furthermore, the use of a quadratic objective function does not reflect the extent to which most individuals have strong preferences for minimizing the incidence of worst-case scenarios. Therefore, given that the central bank’s ultimate goal should be to maximize the public welfare, I believe that the design of monetary policy ought to reflect the public’s preferences, especially with respect to avoiding particularly adverse economic outcomes.

Most of the quantitative studies of optimal monetary policy have also assumed that the shocks hitting the economy have a time-invariant Gaussian distribution, that is, a classical bell curve with symmetric and well-behaved tails. In reality, however, the distribution of shocks hitting the economy is more complex. In some instances, the uncertainty facing the economy is clearly skewed in one direction or another; again, this is likely when there are significant financial disruptions. The Federal Reserve often reports on our judgments regarding the degree of skewness and the associated economic costs by giving assessments of the “Balance of Risks” in the press releases that are issued following FOMC meetings.

In addition, at least in some circumstances, the shocks hitting the economy may exhibit excess kurtosis, commonly referred to as tail risk because the probability of relatively large disturbances is higher than would be implied by a Gaussian distribution. In that light, one element of the recent enhancements to the Federal Reserve’s communication strategy is that FOMC participants now provide assessments of the relative degree of uncertainty. For example, in the “Summary of Economic Projections”issued in late November, FOMC participants indicated that the degree of uncertainty regarding the economic growth outlook was relatively high compared to the average degree of uncertainty over the past two decades. This account could be interpreted as a statement that the Committee perceived the tail risk as unusually large.

With a nonquadratic objective function (consistent with the importance of uncertainty for the course of monetary policy) as well as nonlinear dynamics and non-Gaussian shocks, optimal monetary policy will also be nonlinear and will tend to focus on risk management. Policy in this setting tends to respond aggressively when a large shock becomes evident; for this reason, the degree of inertia in such cases may be markedly lower than in more routine circumstances. Indeed, as I will argue, I believe that financial disruptions of the sort that have been experienced in recent months tend to have highly nonlinear effects on the economy. Thus, compared with the standard case, optimal policy may well involve much more rapid adjustment--a pattern that I will refer to as policy flexibility.

Formal models of how monetary policy should respond to financial disruptions are unfortunately not yet available, and this is an area of research that I plan to pursue with Board staff. However, I do have some thoughts about what a systematic framework should look like, and I would like to share them with you without going into any further technical details.

A Risk-Management Framework for Dealing with Financial Disruptions
Although the assumptions behind the LQ framework might be reasonable during normal times, financial disruptions are likely to produce large deviations from these assumptions, making it especially important to adopt a more flexible framework for analyzing the behavior of a central bank that practices risk management. What factors come into play with special vigor during financial disruptions? First, financial disruptions are likely to lead to highly nonlinear behavior because the cost and availability of credit can shift suddenly. Furthermore, even though linear approximations of the financial accelerator mechanism have typically been used in recent quantitative studies, this mechanism is, in fact, highly nonlinear (Levin, Natalucci, and Zakrajšek, 2004). Finally, because financial disruptions, if severe enough, raise the probability of particularly adverse outcomes, the standard approach of employing a quadratic approximation of the objective function may not be sufficiently accurate to convey the extent to which policymakers seek to avoid such outcomes in maximizing the public’s welfare.

In light of these risk-management considerations, how should monetary policy respond to financial disruptions?

Periods of financial instability are characterized by valuation risk and macroeconomic risk. Monetary policy cannot--and should not--aim at minimizing valuation risk, but policy should aim at reducing macroeconomic risk. By cutting interest rates to offset the negative effects of financial turmoil on aggregate economic activity, monetary policy can reduce the likelihood that a financial disruption might set off an adverse feedback loop. The resulting reduction in uncertainty can then make it easier for the markets to collect the information that facilitates price discovery, thus hastening the return of normal market functioning.

To achieve this result most effectively, monetary policy needs to be timely, decisive, and flexible. First, timely action is crucial when an episode of financial instability becomes sufficiently severe to threaten the core macroeconomic objectives of the central bank. In such circumstances, waiting too long to ease policy could result in further deterioration of the macroeconomy and might well increase the overall amount of easing that would eventually be needed. Therefore, monetary policy must be at least as preemptive in responding to financial shocks as in responding to other types of disturbances to the economy. When financial markets are working well, monetary policy can respond primarily to the incoming flow of economic data about production, employment, and inflation. When a financial disruption occurs, however, greater consideration needs to be given to indicators of market liquidity, credit spreads, and other financial market measures that can provide information about sharp changes in the magnitude of tail risk to the macroeconomy.

Second, policymakers should be prepared for decisive action in response to financial disruptions. In such circumstances, the most likely outcome--referred to as the modal forecast--for the economy may be fairly benign, but there may be a significant risk of more severe adverse outcomes. In such circumstances, the central bank may prefer to take out insurance by easing the stance of policy further than if the distribution of probable outcomes were perceived as fairly symmetric around the modal forecast. Moreover, in such circumstances, these policy actions should not be interpreted by the public or market participants as implying a deterioration in the central bank’s assessment of the most likely outcome for the economy, but rather as an appropriate form of risk management that reduces the risk of particularly adverse outcomes.

Third, policy flexibility is crucial throughout the evolution of a financial market disruption. During the onset of the episode, this flexibility may be evident from the decisive easing of policy that is intended to forestall the contractionary effects of the disruption and provide insurance against the downside risks to the macroeconomy. However, it is important to recognize that financial markets can also turn around quickly, thereby reducing the drag on the economy as well as the degree of tail risk. Therefore, the central bank needs to monitor credit spreads and other incoming data for signs of financial market recovery and, if necessary, take back some of the insurance; thus, at each stage of the episode, the appropriate monetary policy may exhibit much less smoothing than would be typical in other circumstances.

Of course, while policymakers may need to react aggressively to financial market information that indicates a significant shift in macroeconomic risks, monetary policy would typically move back toward a more incremental approach once the risks to the macroeconomy have returned to more usual levels.

Risk Management and the Anchoring of Inflation Expectations
An important proviso to my discussion thus far involves the other part of the dual mandate, price stability. A central bank must always be concerned with inflation as well as growth. As I have emphasized in an earlier speech about inflation dynamics, the behavior of inflation is significantly influenced by the public’s expectations about where inflation is likely to head in the long run (Mishkin, 2007a). Therefore, preemptive actions of the sort I have described here would be counterproductive if these actions caused an increase in inflation expectations and the underlying rate of inflation; in other words, the flexibility to act preemptively against a financial disruption presumes that inflation expectations are well anchored and unlikely to rise during a period of temporary monetary easing. Indeed, as I have argued elsewhere, a commitment to a strong nominal anchor is crucial for both aspects of the dual mandate, that is, for achieving maximum employment as well as for keeping inflation under control (Mishkin, 2007b).

How can a central bank keep inflation expectations solidly anchored so it can respond preemptively to financial disruptions? The central bank has to have earned credibility with financial markets and the public through a record of previous actions to maintain low and stable inflation. Furthermore, the central bank needs to clearly indicate the rationale for its policy actions. Policymakers also need to monitor information about underlying inflation and longer-run inflation expectations, and if the evidence indicates that these inflation expectations have begun rising significantly, the central bank should be prepared to hold steady or even raise the policy rate.

The Federal Reserve’s Recent Monetary Policy Decisions
The framework I have outlined here can be useful in understanding the rationale for the recent decisions of the Federal Reserve and our policy approach going forward. Yesterday, Chairman Bernanke provided a detailed discussion of economic and financial developments and of the Federal Reserve’s policy strategy, so here I will just relate some key points of his discussion to the major themes that I have emphasized today.

First, we are proceeding in a timely manner in countering any developments that might threaten economic or financial stability. The FOMC has not been basing its decisions solely on the incoming flow of economic data; for example, the sequence of interest rate cuts was initiated last fall even though growth in the gross domestic product had been quite strong in the third quarter. Rather, our policy approach has reflected the rapid deterioration of financial market conditions, which has contributed to a worsening of the economic outlook and the emergence of pronounced downside risks to economic growth and employment.

Second, in my view, the Federal Reserve has been acting and will continue to act decisively, in the sense that our policy strategy reflects the evolution of the balance of risks and not simply a change in the modal outlook for the macroeconomy. The disruption in financial markets poses a substantial downside risk to the outlook for economic growth, and adverse economic or financial news has the potential to cause further strains. In that light, the Federal Reserve’s policy strategy is aimed at providing insurance to help avoid more severe macroeconomic outcomes.

Third, because we recognize that financial and economic conditions can change quickly, the Federal Reserve is prepared to respond flexibly to incoming information. Of course, in making its decisions, the Federal Reserve also gives careful consideration to the outlook and risks associated with the second aspect of our dual mandate, namely, price stability. Because longer-run inflation expectations appear to have remained reasonably well anchored, in my view, the easing of the stance of policy in response to deteriorating financial conditions seems unlikely to have an adverse impact on the outlook for inflation. Nonetheless, we will continue to monitor incoming data on inflation and inflation expectations, especially given the potential risks to price stability that are associated with the rapid increase in energy prices and the depreciation of the dollar. In short, the FOMC will determine the future course of monetary policy in light of the evolution of the macroeconomic outlook and the balance of risks to our objectives of maximum employment and price stability.

Conclusions
The monetary policy that is appropriate during an episode of financial market disruption is likely to be quite different than in times of normal market functioning. When financial markets experience a significant disruption, a systematic approach to risk management requires policymakers to be preemptive in responding to the macroeconomic implications of incoming financial market information, and decisive actions may be required to reduce the likelihood of an adverse feedback loop. The central bank also needs to exhibit flexibility--that is, less inertia than would otherwise be typical--not only in moving decisively to reduce downside risks arising from a financial market disruption, but also in being prepared to take back some of that insurance in response to a recovery in financial markets or an upward shift in inflation risks.

Finally, while I have argued that monetary policy needs to be decisive and timely in responding to a financial market disruption, a lot of art as well as science is involved in determining the severity and duration of the disruption and the associated implications for the macroeconomy (Mishkin, 2007c). Indeed, assessing the macroeconomic risks to output and inflation in such circumstances remains among the most difficult challenges faced by monetary policymakers. Furthermore, a central bank may well be able to employ non-monetary tools--such as liquidity provision--to help alleviate the adverse impact from financial disruptions. All of these considerations must be taken into account in determining the most appropriate course of monetary policy.


References
Benigno, Pierpaolo, and Michael Woodford (2003). “Optimal Monetary and Fiscal Policy: A Linear-Quadratic Approach,” in Mark Gertler and Kenneth Rogoff, eds., NBER Macroeconomics Annual 2003. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, pp. 271-332.

Bernanke, Ben S. (2004). “Gradualism,” speech delivered at an economics luncheon co-sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco (Seattle Branch) and the
University of Washington, held in Seattle, May 20.

Bernanke, Ben S., and Mark Gertler (1989). “Agency Costs, Net Worth, and Business Fluctuations,” Leaving the Board American Economic Review, vol. 79 (March), pp. 14-31.

Bernanke, Ben S., Mark Gertler, and Simon Gilchrist (1996). “The Financial Accelerator and the Flight to Quality,” Leaving the Board Review of Economics and Statistics, vol. 78 (February), pp. 1-15.

Bernanke, Ben S., Mark Gertler, and Simon Gilchrist (1999). “The Financial Accelerator in a Quantitative Business Cycle Framework,” in John B. Taylor and Michael Woodford, eds., Handbook of Macroeconomics, vol. 1, part 3. Amsterdam: North-Holland, pp. 1341-93.

Clarida, Richard, Jordi Galí, and Mark Gertler (1998). “Monetary Policy Rules in Practice: Some International Evidence,” Leaving the Board European Economic Review, vol. 42 (June), pp. 1033-67.

Clarida, Richard, Jordi Galí, and Mark Gertler (1999). “The Science of Monetary Policy: A New Keynesian Perspective,” Leaving the Board Journal of Economic Literature, vol. 37 (December), pp. 1661-707.

Clarida, Richard, Jordi Galí, and Mark Gertler (2000). “Monetary Policy Rules and Macroeconomic Stability: Evidence and Some Theory,” Leaving the Board Quarterly Journal of Economics, vol. 115 (February), pp. 147-80.

English, William B., William R. Nelson, and Brian P. Sack (2003). “Interpreting the Significance of the Lagged Interest Rate in Estimated Monetary Policy Rules,” Leaving the Board Contributions to Macroeconomics, vol. 3 (no. 1), article 5.

Erceg, Christopher J., Dale W. Henderson, and Andrew T. Levin (2000). “Optimal Monetary Policy with Staggered Wage and Price Contracts,” Leaving the Board Journal of Monetary Economics, vol. 46 (October), pp. 281-313.

Giannoni, Marc P. , and Michael Woodford (2005). “Optimal Inflation-Targeting Rules,” in Ben S. Bernanke and Michael Woodford, eds., Inflation Targeting. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, pp. 93-172.

Goodfriend, Marvin, and Robert King (1997). “The New Neoclassical Synthesis and the Role of Monetary Policy,” in Ben S. Bernanke and Julio J. Rotemberg, eds., NBER Macroeconomics Annual 1997. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, pp. 231-83.

Hamilton, James D. (1989). “A New Approach to the Economic Analysis of Nonstationary Time Series and the Business Cycle,” Leaving the Board Econometrica, vol. 57 (March), pp. 357-84.

Kim, Chang-Jin, and Charles Nelson (1999). “Has the U.S. Economy Become More Stable? A Bayesian Approach Based on a Markov-Switching Model of the Business Cycle,” Review of Economics and Statistics, vol. 81 (November), pp. 608-16.

Kim, Chang-Jin, James Morley, and Jeremy Piger (2005). “Nonlinearity and the Permanent Effects of Recessions,” Leaving the Board Journal of Applied Econometrics, vol. 20 (no. 2), pp. 291-309.

King, Robert G., and Alexander L. Wolman (1999). “What Should the Monetary Authority Do When Prices Are Sticky?” in John Taylor, ed., Monetary Policy Rules. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, pp. 349-98.

Levin, Andrew T., Fabio M. Natalucci, and Egon Zakrajšek (2004). “The Magnitude and Cyclical Behavior of Financial Market Frictions,” Finance and Economics Discussion Series 2004-70. Washington: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, December.

Levin, Andrew, Alexei Onatski, John C. Williams, and Noah Williams (2005). “Monetary Policy under Uncertainty in Micro-Founded Macroeconometric Models,” in Mark Gertler and Kenneth Rogoff, eds., NBER Macroeconomics Annual 2005. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, pp. 229-88.

Mishkin, Frederic S. (2007a). “Inflation Dynamics,” speech delivered at the Annual Macro Conference, Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, San Francisco, March 23.

Mishkin, Frederic S. (2007b). “Monetary Policy and the Dual Mandate,” speech delivered at Bridgewater College, Bridgewater, Va., April 10.

Mishkin, Frederic S. (2007c). “Will Monetary Policy Become More of a Science?” Finance and Economics Discussion Series 2007-44. Washington: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, September.

Mishkin, Frederic S. (2007d). “Financial Instability and Monetary Policy,” speech delivered at the Risk USA 2007 Conference, New York, November 5.

Mishkin, Frederic S. (2007e). “The Federal Reserve’s Enhanced Communication Strategy and the Science of Monetary Policy,” speech delivered to the Undergraduate Economics Association, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Mass., November 29.

Rotemberg, Julio, and Michael Woodford (1997). “An Optimization-Based Econometric Framework for the Evaluation of Monetary Policy,” in Ben S. Bernanke and Julio J. Rotemberg, eds., NBER Macroeconomics Annual 1997. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, pp. 297-346.

Sack, Brian (2000). “Does the Fed Act Gradually? A VAR Analysis,” Leaving the Board Journal of Monetary Economics, vol. 46 (August), pp. 229-56.

Schmitt-Grohé, Stephanie, and Martin Uribe (2005). “Optimal Fiscal and Monetary Policy in a Medium-Scale Macroeconomic Model,” in Mark Gertler and Kenneth Rogoff, eds., NBER Macroeconomics Annual 2005. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, pp. 383-425.

Smets, Frank, and Raf Wouters (2003). “An Estimated Dynamic Stochastic General Equilibrium Model of the Euro Area,” Leaving the Board Journal of the European Economic Association, vol. 1 (September), pp. 1123-75.

Woodford, Michael (2003). Interest and Prices: Foundations of a Theory of Monetary Policy. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

Footnotes

1. I appreciate the comments and assistance of William English, Andrew Levin, Brian Madigan, Roberto Perli, David Reifschneider, and David Wilcox.

2. Such asymmetry leads to two prominent difficulties for the functioning of the financial system: adverse selection and moral hazard. Adverse selection arises when investments that are most likely to produce an undesirable (adverse) outcome are the most likely to be financed (selected). For example, investors who intend to take on large amounts of risk are the most likely to be willing to seek out loans because they know that they are unlikely to pay them back. Moral hazard arises because a borrower has incentives to invest in high-risk projects, in which the borrower does well if the project succeeds but the lender bears a substantial loss if the project fails.

3. The now-classic textbook on this topic is Woodford (2003); refer also to Goodfriend and King (1997); Rotemberg and Woodford (1997); Clarida, Gali, and Gertler (1999); King and Wolman (1999); Erceg, Henderson, and Levin (2000); Benigno and Woodford (2003); Giannoni and Woodford (2005); Levin and others (2005); and Schmitt-Grohé and Uribe (2005);

4. Clarida, Gali, and Gertler (1998, 2000); Sack (2000); English, Nelson, and Sack (2003); Smets and Wouters (2003); Levin and others (2005); further discussion is in Bernanke (2004).

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'북한'인가 '조선'인가 호칭 논쟁 [서울=뉴스핌] 김현구 기자 = 최슬아 숭실대 교수는 29일 "북한이라는 호명이 상대방을 한반도의 일부처럼 위치시킨다면 조선이라는 호명은 하나의 독립된 행위자로 인정하는 방향으로 작동할 수 있다"고 진단했다. 최 교수는 "북한을 인정해야 된다는 주장은 어떤 온정적인 제안이 아니라 상대를 인정함으로써 불안을 낮추고 관계를 보다 안정적으로 관리하기 위한 굉장히 중요한 출발점이 될 것"이라고 내다봤다. 한국정치학회(회장 윤종빈)는 이날 서울 중구 한국프레스센터에서 '평화 공존을 위한 이름 부르기:북한인가 조선인가' 주제로 특별학술회의를 열었다. 통일부는 관련 논의를 공론화한다는 취지에서 이번 학술회의를 후원했다. 사회를 맡은 권만학 경희대 명예교수는 "호칭은 기본적으로 식별 기능을 갖지만 정치적 호칭이 되는 순간 이데올로기를 담게 된다"고 말했다. 권 교수는 "북한은 '대한민국'을 공식 명칭으로 부르며 남쪽을 외국으로 재정의했다"면서 "하지만 우리는 여전히 '북한' '북측'이라는 표현을 사용한다"며 토론 필요성을 강조했다. 정동영 통일부 장관이 지난 20일 서울 종로구 정부서울청사에 들어서며 도어스태핑을 갖고 최근 북한 '핵시설' 발언에 대한 입장을 밝히고 있다. [사진=뉴스핌DB] ◆ 김성경 "호칭은 분단 산물…'조선' 관계 전환 출발점" 김성경 서강대 교수는 "북한이라는 호명은 비공식적·약칭적 표현이지만 분단 80년 동안 누적된 정치적 의미를 가진 것"이라면서 "북한을 계속 북한이라고 부르는 한 우리 안에 북한이 계속 갇힐 수밖에 없다"고 진단했다. 김 교수는 "학계에서는 (북한을) 조선, 북조선으로 부르는 경향이 좀 있었다"며 "남과 북의 국가 정체성이 이미 상당히 공고화돼 있는 현 상황에서 국가와 국가 사이의 관계 맺기를 본격적으로 시작할 수 있는 시기가 도래한 것"이라고 평가했다. 김 교수는 "북한을 계속 유지한다는 것이 평화공존이나 통일에 더 도움이 된다는 논리적 근거를 찾기 어렵다"면서 "우리가 상상할 수 있는 통일은 남북이 서로를 인정 존중하고 그 맥락 안에서 관계를 맺고 남북 주민이 통일을 선택하는 것이 가장 현실적인 방안"이라고 제시했다. ◆ 권은민 "국호 사용, 국가 승인 아냐…정치가 먼저, 법은 따라간다" 권은민 김앤장법률사무소 변호사는 "북한을 조선민주주의인민공화국 또는 'DPRK'라고 부른다고 해서 그것이 꼭 국가 승인이나 정부 승인을 구성하지는 않는다"면서 "국가 승인은 정치적 행위이고 국가 의사 표시다. 그렇게 부르더라도 국가 승인과는 무관하다라고 선언을 하면 정리가 되는 문제"라고 진단했다. 권 변호사는 "남북관계는 법률의 영역이라기보다는 정치의 영역에 가까운 것 같다"면서 "과거에도 정치가 큰 틀을 규정하고 법과 제도가 따라가는 변화가 있었다"고 설명했다. 권 변호사는 "남북 기본합의서 제1조는 '상대방의 체제를 인정하고 존중한다'고 돼 있다"면서 "이름을 제대로 불러주는 것이 그 출발점"이라고 강조했다. 권 변호사는 "국호 사용은 상호 주권을 존중하는 취지의 기존 합의를 계승하는 것"이라면서 "당사자 표기는 상대방이 원하는 공식 국호를 불러주고 그것이 국가 승인은 아니다라는 것을 전제로 하면 된다"고 제언했다. [서울=뉴스핌] 이영종 통일북한전문기자 = 북한 국무위원장 김정은이 군수공업을 담당하는 제2경제위 산하 중요 군수공장을 방문했다고 관영 조선중앙통신이 12일 보도했다. 사진은 김정은이 이 공장에서 생산된 권총으로 사격하는 모습. [사진=북한매체 종합] 2026.03.12 yjlee@newspim.com ◆ 이동기 "독일도 경멸적 호칭 쓰다 공식 국호 전환…출발은 이름" 이동기 강원대 교수는 "서독은 동독을 경멸적 표현으로 불렀지만 긴장이 격화되면서 더 큰 평화 정치에 대한 구상이 폭발했다"면서 "국제 환경이 좋지 않을수록 평화 화해 논의가 공존에 대한 요구나 필요를 폭발할 수도 있다"고 진단했다.  이 교수는 "독일 정치권에서는 헤르베르트 베너 전독문제부(통일부) 장관이 가장 먼저 동독 공식 국호를 사용했다"며 "당시에는 언론의 융단 폭격을 받았지만 시간이 해결해줬다. 국제법적으로는 여전히 인정하지 않았지만 실질적으로는 국가로 승인한 것"이라고 설명했다. 이 교수는 "원칙을 고수하는 것만으로는 부족하고 인내만으로도 부족하다"면서 "결국 원칙 고수와 실용주의가 결합하는 모든 출발은 국호의 제대로 된 호명이고, 동시에 장기적으로는 근본 전환이 필요하다"고 제언했다. ◆ "호칭 변경, 굴복 아닌 공존 가능성 넓히는 정치적 전략" 패널 토론에서 전문가들은 조선 호명에 대해 긍정적인 입장을 제시했다. 김태경 성공회대 교수는 "젊은 세대에는 '둘의 우리'가 상식적으로 받아들여지는 시점"이라며 "우리가 조선을 일종의 주권 국가로서 인정하는 과정은 결국 우리에 대한 자기 인정과 그들에 대한 인정이 같이 결합되는 부분"이라고 설명했다. 김주희 국립부경대 교수는 "핵심은 인정과 통일 사이의 균형을 어떻게 접근할 것인가에 대한 부분"이라면서 "실질적으로 가는 데 있어서는 담론과 제도, 정치 차원에서의 접근을 만들어가야 한다"고 제언했다. 김 교수는 "호칭을 바꾸는 것은 굴복이 아니라 적대를 줄이고 공존의 가능성을 넓히는 하나의 정치적 전략일 수 있다"고 분석했다.  hyun9@newspim.com 2026-04-29 18:04
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제이알發 쇼크에 리츠업계 초긴장 [서울=뉴스핌] 정영희 기자 = 국내 1호 해외 부동산 공모 리츠인 제이알글로벌리츠가 자산 가치 하락과 유동성 위기를 견디지 못하고 결국 법정관리를 신청했다. 상장 리츠 가운데 사실상 첫 디폴트 사례가 발생하면서 시장에 적잖은 충격을 주고 있다. 다만 업계에서는 이번 사안을 개별 리츠의 리스크로 보는 시각이 우세하며, 전체 시장으로 확산되는 시스템 리스크 가능성은 제한적일 것이라는 분석이 많다. 정부는 관련 시장에 대한 긴급 점검에 착수하는 한편, 필요 시 유동성 지원과 함께 구조 개선을 병행하는 등 시장 안정화 대책을 추진할 방침이다. [AI 그래픽 생성=정영희 기자] ◆ 무너진 해외 부동산 가치…유동성 위기 예견됐나 30일 리츠업계에 따르면 제이알투자운용의 기업회생 절차 돌입으로 인해 투자자들의 긴장감이 시장 전반으로 확산하는 모양새다. 국내 대형 독립계 리츠 자산관리회사인 제이알투자운용이 2020년 국내 최초로 유가증권시장에 안착시킨 해외 부동산 공모 리츠다. 벨기에 브뤼셀 중심부에 위치한 파이낸스타워와 미국 뉴욕 맨해튼의 498세븐스애비뉴 등 대형 상업용 오피스 빌딩을 기초 자산으로 편입해 운용해 왔다. 그러나 금리 상승 등의 영향으로 벨기에 브뤼셀 파이낸스타워 가치가 떨어지면서, 단기사채 400억원을 상환하지 못해 지난 27일 서울회생법원에 회생 절차 개시를 신청했다. 한국거래소는 전일 매매 거래를 정지하고 관리종목으로 지정했다. 이번 사태는 어느 정도 예견된 수순이었다는 분석이 힘을 얻고 있다. 제이알글로벌리츠는 지난 1월 1200억원 규모의 유상증자를 공시했으나 해외 자산의 감정평가서 수신 지연 등을 이유로 한 달 만인 2월 이를 자진 철회했다. 핵심 자산인 벨기에 파이낸스타워의 감정평가액이 급락하면서 현지 대주단과 약정한 담보인정비율을 초과했다. 임대료 등으로 발생한 현금 흐름을 대출 상환에 우선 충당하도록 묶어두는 캐시트랩(Cash Trap, 현금 동결)이 발동되더니 기업회생으로 이어졌다.  박광식 한국기업평가 수석연구원은 "올 들어 차입 만기 도래에 따른 차환 부담이 지속되는 가운데 환헤지(환율 고정 상품) 정산금 명목으로 약 1000억원의 추가적인 자금 조달이 시급하다"며 "캐시트랩 해소를 위해서는 약 7830만유로(한화 약 1354억원)의 현지 차입금 상환을 위한 추가 재원 조달이 필요하다"고 말했다. ◆ 일제히 꺾인 리츠주…시스템 리스크 확산은 기우? 이 같은 악재에 상장 리츠 전체에 대한 투자 심리가 급격히 악화될 수 있다는 우려가 고개를 든다. 실제로 한국거래소 거래 동향을 살펴보면 이날 리츠 종목들은 일제히 곤두박질쳤다. 마스턴프리미어리츠가 큰 폭으로 미끄러진 것을 비롯해 한화리츠, 삼성FN리츠, SK리츠, 코람코라이프인프라리츠 등이 급락세를 면치 못하며 시장의 불안감을 드러냈다. 뚜렷한 성장 가도를 달리던 리츠 업계는 발을 동동 구르는 처지가 됐다. 한국리츠협회 통계에 따르면 지난달 31일 종가 기준으로 국내 증시에 상장된 25개 리츠의 시가총액은 9조7778억원을 기록했다. 리츠 시장은 지난해 1월 8조103억원 수준에서 같은 해 9월 9조2048억원을 돌파했고 5개월 만인 지난 2월에는 10조원을 넘어서는 등 몸집을 불려왔다. 그동안 일반 주식에 밀려 상대적으로 소외됐지만, 최근 코스피 강세장 속에서 안정적인 피난처로 주목받은 결과다. 법적으로 배당 가능 이익의 90% 이상을 의무적으로 배당해야 하는 구조적 특성 덕분에 확실한 현금 흐름을 선호하는 투자 자금이 대거 몰린 것도 호재 원인 중 하나로 제시됐다. 그러나 이번 사태의 파장이 전체 금융 시장으로 퍼질 것이란 예측은 설득력이 떨어진다는 지적이다. 국내 상장 리츠 22개사 중 해외 자산을 보유한 비중은 14.3%이지만, 전체 자산 기준으로 환산하면 해외 자산 비중은 1.2%에 불과하다. 국내 상장 리츠의 총투자 자산 대비 해외 자산이 차지하는 파이가 극히 작아 전이 가능성이 낮다는 뜻이다. 지난달 말 자산 구성 및 투자 유형별 포트폴리오 비중을 보면 주택이 44.0%로 가장 컸다. 오피스는 35.3%에 머물렀으며 리테일 6.4%, 물류 6.4%, 혼합형 3.6%, 기타 3.2%, 호텔 1.1% 순으로 나타나 이번 위기의 진원지인 해외 오피스 리스크와는 거리를 두고 있는 것으로 나타났다. 조수희 LS증권 연구원은 제이알리츠의 최근 기준 발행 잔액이 약 4000억원으로 전체 크레딧 시장 규모와 비교하면 찻잔 속의 태풍 수준이라고 일축했다. 일반 크레딧물과 달리 리츠가 발행한 회사채는 개인 투자자의 비중이 압도적으로 높아 기관 투자자 중심으로 굴러가는 국내 크레딧 시장 심리에 타격을 주기는 구조적으로 어렵다는 판단이다. 김은기 삼성증권 연구원 역시 이번 이벤트가 단기사채 미상환으로 불거진 만큼 단기 자금 시장 경색이 회사채 시장으로 파급될까 우려하는 시각이 존재하지만 최근 풍부한 단기 자금을 바탕으로 기업어음 금리가 안정적으로 낮게 유지되고 있어 과거의 신용 위기와는 양상이 완전히 다르다고 선을 그었다. ◆ 국토부 방화벽 구축 총력전…상장리츠, 자산 다각화 과제로 다만 해외 부동산 자산에 직간접적으로 투자하는 리츠 종목들은 당분간 위축된 행보를 보일 가능성을 배제할 수 없다. 현재 해외 부동산 자산에 투자하는 상장 리츠는 KB스타리츠, 미래에셋글로벌리츠, 마스턴프리미어리츠, 신한글로벌액티브리츠, 디앤디플랫폼리츠, 이지스레지던스리츠 등이다. 이 중 해외 자산 구성 비중이 100%인 곳이 3개사, 50% 이상이 2개사, 50% 미만이 3개사로 파악됐다. 대표적으로 디앤디플랫폼리츠는 일본 소재 아마존 물류센터에 간접 투자 중이며 이지스레지던스리츠는 미국 소재 임대주택 및 대학 기숙사에 자금을 투입하고 있다. 이은미 나이스신용평가 수석연구원은 "해외 자산의 장부 가치 비중이 각 리츠 총자산의 5~30% 수준에 그쳐 전반적인 쏠림 현상은 없다"면서도 "해외 자산을 보유한 개별 리츠의 경우 현지 대출 약정 위반에 따른 현금 흐름 통제와 국내 채무 차환 부담이라는 이중고를 동시에 겪을 수 있어 리스크 관리가 필요하다"고 말했다. 글로벌 부동산 시장의 한파도 부담이다. 모건스탠리캐피털인터내셔널 보고서에 따르면 지난해 4분기 주요 도시 상업용 부동산 가격은 전년 동기 대비 4.7% 떨어졌다. 고점을 찍었던 2022년과 15%나 증발했다. 런던과 베를린 등 유럽 주요 도시의 상업용 부동산 가격은 30% 넘게 폭락했다. 정부도 사태의 엄중함을 인지하고 발 빠르게 방화벽 구축에 나섰다. 국토교통부는 이날 오후 김이탁 제1차관 주재로 금융위원회, 한국부동산원, 금융감독원 등 관계 부처를 긴급 소집해 점검 회의를 열었다. 리츠 시장 전반의 현황을 점검하는 한편, 투자자 보호를 위한 대응 방향을 집중적으로 논의하기 위한 자리다. 국토부 관계자는 "제이알글로벌리츠의 부실화 과정에서 불거진 각종 의혹을 규명하기 위해 전일 합동 검사에 착수했으며, 불법 행위가 적발될 경우 엄정 대응할 방침"이라며 "시장 안정을 위해서 대기업이나 공기업이 최대주주가 되는 앵커리츠를 공급하고, 변동성이 통제 수준을 넘어설 경우 채권 및 자금 시장 안정 프로그램 규모를 즉각적으로 늘릴 수 있도록 비상 대응 체계를 가동하겠다"고 말했다. 시장 전문가들은 사태 수습을 넘어 리츠 시장의 근본적인 체질 개선과 신뢰 회복이 시급하다고 목소리를 높이고 있다. 상장 리츠의 주가를 궤도에 올려놓고 시장을 활성화하기 위해서는 투자자의 신뢰를 되찾는 것이 급선무라고 지적했다. 김필규 자본시장연구원 선임연구위원은 "정보의 투명성이 담보된 상태에서 시장 상황에 맞게 자금 조달의 유연성을 높여주고, 우량 자산 편입과 리츠 간 합병을 통해 자산 포트폴리오를 다각화하는 정책이 뒤따라야 한다"며 "자산관리회사 역시 수동적인 태도에서 벗어나 운용 현황과 배당 전략 등을 공개하고, 적극적으로 소통함으로써 정보 비대칭으로 인한 불신을 거둬내야 한다"고 제언했다. chulsoofriend@newspim.com 2026-04-30 06:00
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