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An Investigation of the Gains from Commitment in Monetary Policy
Ernst Schaumburg Northwestern University - Kellogg School of Management Andrea Tambalotti Federal Reserve Bank of New York August 2003 FRB of NY Staff Report No. 171 Abstract: This paper proposes a simple framework for analyzing a continuum of monetary policy rules characterized by differing degrees of credibility, in which commitment and discretion become special cases of what we call quasi commitment. The monetary policy authority is assumed to formulate optimal commitment plans, to be tempted to renege on them, and to succumb to this temptation with a constant exogenous probability known to the private sector. By interpreting this probability as a continuous measure of the (lack of) credibility of the monetary policy authority, we investigate the welfare effect of a marginal increase in credibility. Our main finding is that, in a simple model of the monetary transmission mechanism, most of the gains from commitment accrue at relatively low levels of credibility. In our benchmark calibration, a commitment expected to last for only 6 quarters is enough to bridge 75% of the welfare gap between discretion and commitment. This seems to justify the well known concern of monetary policy makers about their credibility, even in a world with limited access to commitment technologies.
Keywords: Commitment, discretion, credibility, welfare JEL Classifications: E52, E58, E61 Working Paper SeriesDate posted: April 15, 2003 ; Last revised: March 27, 2006Suggested CitationContact Information
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