Institutional Arrangements for Monetary Policy When Output Is Persistent.
A discretionary monetary policy gives rise to a constant average inflation bias, a state-contingent inflation bias, and a stabilization bias when output is persistent. The paper considers institutional arrangements ("contracts") for central banks that remove these policy imperfections. The average and state-contingent inflation biases can be removed by directing the central bank to target the growth of nominal income and appoint a central banker with a specific relative weight attached to output stabilization. An alternative to this institutional solution is to direct central banks to aim for a feasible output target. Although this would remove the inflationary biases, the government must appoint a "liberal" (as opposed to "conservative") central banker in order to implement optimal stabilization.
Year of publication: |
2001
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Authors: | Roisland, Oistein |
Published in: |
Journal of Money, Credit and Banking. - Blackwell Publishing. - Vol. 33.2001, 4, p. 994-1014
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Publisher: |
Blackwell Publishing |
Saved in:
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