23 research outputs found
Real interest rates and central bank operating procedures
We use consumption-based CAPM models (with fixed and flexible wages) to
analyze the effect of central bank operating procedures on the ex ante
real rate of return on a one-period nominal bond. We show that operating
procedures affect both the risk-free rate and the risk premium. Nominal
interest rate targeting produces the highest real interest rates; money
targeting produces the lowest rates; and nominal income targeting comes
out somewhere in between. Our simulations suggest that the central
bank’s choice of operating procedure may make as much as 50 or 100 basis
points difference in the real rate of interest. The role of monetary
aggregates has diminished in most central banks’ operating procedures,
and this provides one explanation for the common perception that real
interest rates may have risen. Nevertheless, our analysis also
demonstrates that there is no presumption that monetary targeting
dominates from a welfare point of view. (C) 1998 Elsevier Science B.V.
All rights reserved
Assessing sticky price models using the Burns and Mitchell approach
This article evaluates sticky-price models using the methods proposed by Burns and Mitchell, focusing on the monetary aspects of the business cycle. Recent research has emphasized the responses of models to shocks at the expense of its systematic component. Whereas sticky-price models have been successful at replicating impulse response functions from vector autoregressions, this article highlights that they are unable to mimic the data for nominal variables. Moreover, the results are robust to the specification of the Phillips curve, including its backward-looking variant, calibrated values and the inclusion of fiscal policy shocks. Since being able to mimic the data is the lowest hurdle a Model must pass, these results pose a challenge for sticky price models.
Fiscal Policy and Macroeconomic Stabilizations: What are the Gains from Cooperation?
Fiscal policy, Spillovers, Stabilization, Coordination, New open economy, F41, F42, E42,
Testing a DSGE Model of the EU Using Indirect Inference
Bootstrap, DSGE model, VAR model, Model of EU, Indirect inference, Wald statistic, C12, C32,
Two Orthogonal Continents? Testing a Two-country DSGE Model of the US and the EU Using Indirect Inference
Bootstrap, Open economy model, DSGE, VAR, New Keynesian, New Classical, Indirect inference , Wald statistic, C12, C32, C52, E1,
Euro-Area Inflation: does the Balassa–Samuelson effect matter?
Inflation target, Balassa–Samuelson effect, Monetary policy, Euro Area,
Fiscal sustainability across government tiers
Fiscal policy, Fiscal rules, EMU, SGP, Fiscal federalism, E61, E62, H11, H72, H77.,