Informational Implications of Money, Interest Rate, and Price Rules.
The information available to private agents determines the effectiveness of various types of monetary policy. In an economy in which private agents have differential information sets, the ranking of three classes of monetary policy rules critically depends on the specification of agents' information sets. A price rule, for example, minimizes the variance of output around its full information level when agents observe both the interest rate and money stock. More generally, if al l three monetary policy variables (the money stock, the price level, and the interest rate) are contempor aneously ob served, the policy ranking is indeterminate. Copyright 1988 by Oxford University Press.
Year of publication: |
1988
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Authors: | Bradley, Michael D ; Jansen, Dennis W |
Published in: |
Economic Inquiry. - Western Economic Association International - WEAI. - Vol. 26.1988, 3, p. 437-48
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Publisher: |
Western Economic Association International - WEAI |
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