Policy Rules for Open Economies

30 Pages Posted: 27 Dec 1998 Last revised: 23 Dec 2022

See all articles by Laurence Ball

Laurence Ball

Johns Hopkins University - Department of Economics; National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER); International Monetary Fund (IMF)

Date Written: October 1998

Abstract

This paper examines the choice of a monetary-policy rule in a simple macroeconomic model. In a closed economy, the optimal policy is a output and inflation. In an open economy, the optimal rule changes in two ways. First, the policy instrument is a Conditions Index the exchange rate. Second, on the right side of the rule, inflation is replaced by filters out the transitory effects of exchange-rate movements. The model also implies that pure inflation targeting is dangerous in an open economy, because it creates large fluctuations in exchange rates and output. Targeting long-run inflation avoids this problem and produces a close approximation to the optimal instrument rule.

Suggested Citation

Ball, Laurence M., Policy Rules for Open Economies (October 1998). NBER Working Paper No. w6760, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=137994

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