Presentasi sedang didownload. Silahkan tunggu

Presentasi sedang didownload. Silahkan tunggu

Monetary Policy Sri Adiningsih, Ph.D..

Presentasi serupa


Presentasi berjudul: "Monetary Policy Sri Adiningsih, Ph.D.."— Transcript presentasi:

1 Monetary Policy Sri Adiningsih, Ph.D.

2 Interest rate, Credit, & Money
The Role of Monetary Policy Economic Activity Interest rate, Credit, & Money Monetary System Monetary Policy

3 Tujuan Kebijakan Moneter:
Internal balance External balance Internal Balance Menjaga inflasi supaya rendah Tercapainya laju pertumbuhan ekonomi yang tinggi Tercapainya kesempatan kerja yang tinggi External Balance Keseimbangan neraca pembayaran (BOP)  dalam sistem perekonomian terbuka seperti Indonesia, kedua target keseimbangan ekonomi itu saling terkait atau memerlukan penyelesaian secara simultan.

4 Kebijakan Moneter Pengendalian permintaan (demand management) Target moneter (monetary targetry) Demand management dalam kaitan dengan pengendalian inflasi dilakukan dengan menjaga agar permintaan uang, barang dan jasa dapat dipertahankan pada tingkat yang tidak mendorong inflasi (non inflationary level) Target moneter atau lebih khususnya target jumlah uang beredar atau pengendalian JUB atau suku bunga. Kebijakan yang dapat dilakukan antara lain dengan menurunkan jumlah uang primer, menaikkan cadangan wajib (reserve requirement) dan menaikkan suku bunga.

5 Monetary Policy Instruments Open Market Operation Reserves requirement
Credit selection Moral suasion Efektivitas Kebijakan Moneter dipengaruhi: Ada tidaknya tujuan yang saling bertentangan tingkat moneterisasi masyarakat faktor kelambanan (time lag) Pengaruh lembaga keuangan Asa (expectations) masyarakat Faktor yang mempengaruhi variable target

6 MONETARY POLICY IN INDONESIA
‘Old Regime’ period monetary policy was direct monetary authority tightly controlled the monetary sector bank were extended hand from the State state budget deficit was financed by loan from Bank Indonesia  the inflation became uncontrollable (reaching 635% in 1966) the economy condition experienced a stagnation ‘New Order’ period Promulgated stabilization program through a balance budget policy  money circulation was controllable Encouraged investment (both foreign & domestic) UU PMA & UU PMDN Banking operation  UU no.14 of 1967 (Banking Laws) and UU no.13 of 1968 (Bank Indonesia’s Laws) Inflation rate under control  declined (635% in 1966 to 10% in 1969) and even just 2,5% in 1971  stability program success

7 MONETARY POLICY Environment before deregulation
low level of monetization (ratio of money supply to GNP) banking network has not been well-spread banking technology has not been develop capital market has not been developed The constraint can result in a less effective monetary policy. the structure of supporting means of monetary policy in the form financial and non financial institution still inadequate financial sector dominated by bank assets in monetary sector dominated by 6 State Banks, even though shows a declining trend by the deregulation policy.

8 The world economy slackened in 1981/1982
limited government funds:  oil prices adjustment policies: devaluation, project scheduling and banking deregulation of June 1,1983 (Monetary Reform 1983) Monetary and financial reforms in June 1983 state bank were permitted to set some deposit and lending rate (except priority programs) Credit ceiling removed launched open market operations

9 Promulgating ‘October 27, 1988’ package:
reduce minimum reserves from 15% to 2% easing to open new bank or branches easing requirements to set up new foreign exchange banks BUMN funds could be invested in private banks and non banking institutions Led to accelerated growth of number of banks, assets, resources mobilization, more diversified product & greater service, & efficiency Resulted several problems: mismatch (maturity problems), loan pricing, supervision, legal and accounting problems

10 Bank Indonesia responded with new policies of supervision in 1991:
Capital Adequacy Ratio (CAR) 8% Net Open Position 20% Prohibition lending for securities trading Minimum experience requirements for bank directors Staff training and minimum soundness before opening new branches

11 Indonesian Crisis the collapse of the exchange rate:
Rp2500/USD → Rp15000/USD economic contraction: 7.8% (1996/97) → -13.2% (1998) the $22 billion reversal of private capital flows, from inflows of $10 billion (1996/97) to outflows of $12 billion (1997/98) is nearly as large as total net capital flows in the entire decade to the price of Indonesia’s key export, oil, has fallen to $13 a barrel, its lowest level in real terms in 30 years enormous political changes are taking place

12 BANKING RESTRUCTURING
IBRA established in January 1998 Recapitalization: Rp430 trillions Closing and merger bank: BLBI Full Blanket Guarantee Strengthen regulation and supervision By the end of year 2000 there were modest signs of a banking recovery: NPL have dropped to average 18% CAR improved to positive of more than 4 Some banks have returned to profitability

13 RESPONSE TO CRISIS Central Bank of Indonesia independency: UU no.23/1999 Managed Floating → Free Floating Exchange Rate Banking International Settlement (BIS) principles Money Laundering → Financial Action Task Force (FATF/PPATK) Free Capital Movement: UU no.24/1999

14 Indikator Kinerja Bank Umum 1998-2004
1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 Jumlah Bank 208 164 151 145 141 138 134 Jumlah Kantor Bank 7661 7016 6397 6657 6886 7621 7826 Total Asset 895.5 1006.7 1030.5 1099.7 1112.2 1213.5 1272.1 Dana Pihak Ketiga 625.4 617.6 699.1 797.4 835.8 888.6 963.1 Kredit 545.5 277.3 320.4 358.6 410.3 477.2 595.1 LDR (%) 72.4 26.2 33.2 33 38.2 43.5 50 NPL - gross(%) 48.6 32.8 18.8 12.1 8.1 8.2 5.8 NPL - net(%) 34.7 7.3 3.6 2.1 3 1.7 Modal -129.8 -41.2 53.5 62.3 93 110.8 118.6 CAR -15.7 -8.1 12.5 20.5 22.5 19.4 Laba (rugi) sblm pajak -178.6 -75.4 10.5 13.1 22 26.4 41.1 Net Interest Income -61.2 -38.6 22.8 37.8 42.9 49.5 65.8 Sumber: Laporan Tahunan Bank Indonesia

15 Figure 1. Indonesia’s Inflation Rate & Interest Rate (%)
Sources: Bank Indonesia, & US Federal Reserve

16 Gambar 1. Pertumbuhan Ekonomi, Inflasi dan Tingkat Bunga, 1991-2007 (%)
* Pertumbuhan PDB tw 1 s.d tw 3/07 terhdp tw 1 s.d tw 3/06 (6,3%) Inflasi: 6,71% (YoY Nov 2007), dan Tingkat Bunga BI rate: 8% (6 Des 2007) Sumber: BPS dan Bank Indonesia

17 Mo, M1, & M2 (trillion Rp) Sources: Indonesian Financial Statistics BI

18 Mo, M1, & M2 Growth (%) Sources: Indonesian Financial Statistics BI

19 M1 & M2 (% of GDP) Sources: IFS IMF & Indonesian Financial Statistics BI

20 Money Supply, Interest Rates, & International Reserves
Year M1 (bilion Rp) M2 SBI 1 month (%) Int’l Reserve (milion US$) (% of GDP) 1970 243 323 - 156 7.3 9.7 1980 6,476 10,147 5,392 14.2 22.3 1990 20,559 58,526 18.8 7,459 27.8 1996 64,089 288,632 12.8 18,251 12.0 54.2 1998 101,197 577,381 38.44 22,713 10.6 60.4 2000 162,186 747,028 14.53 28,502 59.1 2003 223,799 955,692 8.31 34,962 12.5 53.5 2004 253,800 1,033,500 7.43 36,320 11.0 44.9 Sources: IFS IMF & Indonesian Financial Statistics BI

21 International Reserve (billion US$)
Sources: IFS IMF & Indonesian Financial Statistics BI


Download ppt "Monetary Policy Sri Adiningsih, Ph.D.."

Presentasi serupa


Iklan oleh Google