Showing 1 - 10 of 22
The lesson of the sovereign debt crises of the 2010s, and of the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic is that EMU irreversibility, if not to remain a wishful statement in the founding treaties, necessitates to be completed by carefully designed ramparts for extraordinary times beside regulations...
Persistent link: https://ebvufind01.dmz1.zbw.eu/10012600011
The resurgence of inflation since the late 2021 is now accompanied by a reversal of prospects of growth, reviving fears of stagflation across the world (IMF 2022, World Bank 2022). In almost all accounts of the mounting stagflation threats a prominent role is played by the fall of households'...
Persistent link: https://ebvufind01.dmz1.zbw.eu/10014290104
In this paper the authors present a New Keynesian quantitative model with endogenous investment and stock-market sector that may shed further light on two unsettled issues: whether central banks should include some financial indicator in their policy rules, and which indicator may be expected to...
Persistent link: https://ebvufind01.dmz1.zbw.eu/10010308738
When inflation picks up, central banks are most concerned that the de-anchoring of inflation expectations and the ignition of wage-price spirals will trigger inflation dynamic instability. However, such scenarios do not materialize in the standard New Keynesian theoretical framework for monetary...
Persistent link: https://ebvufind01.dmz1.zbw.eu/10014534447
Current macro-models based on the demand-side effects of monetary policy and sticky prices account for the observed correlations between policy interest rates, output and inflation, but they fail with regard to other empirical regularities, such as the negative effects of policy shocks on real...
Persistent link: https://ebvufind01.dmz1.zbw.eu/10010298569
Drawing on the modern literature on the monetary transmission mechanisms with capital market imperfections, this paper presents a model of the "credit-cost channel" of monetary policy. The thrust of the model is that firms' reliance on bank loans ("credit channel") may make aggregate supply...
Persistent link: https://ebvufind01.dmz1.zbw.eu/10010298632
In this paper, the authors present a New Keynesian quantitative model with endogenous investment and a stock-market sector to shed further light on two unsettled issues: whether central banks should include some financial indicator in their policy rules, and what indicator may be expected to...
Persistent link: https://ebvufind01.dmz1.zbw.eu/10010307702
The EMU has been founded on the exclusive national responsibility doctrine, except for monetary sovereignty devoted to a single bank. This foundation had and still has complex political motivations, but it is in overt contradiction with the fundamental fact that creating a highly integrated...
Persistent link: https://ebvufind01.dmz1.zbw.eu/10012232133
There is now wide agreement that under the pressure of the 2008 crisis serious flaws have emerged in the design of the European Economic and Monetary Union (EMU) as a supranational architecture with the overarching end to generate and distribute collective benefits from integration and...
Persistent link: https://ebvufind01.dmz1.zbw.eu/10012232136
Macroeconomic imbalances (MI) play a prominent role in the "consensus narrative" of the crisis of the Euro Zone (EZ). Accordingly, the package of governance reforms undertaken by the EZ countries amid the crisis includes the Macroeconomic Imbalances Procedure (MIP) to be enacted by the...
Persistent link: https://ebvufind01.dmz1.zbw.eu/10012232145