Should Optimal Discretionary Monetary Policy Look at Money?
47 Pages Posted: 2 Dec 2012
Date Written: November 1, 2002
Abstract
This paper examines whether monetary indicators are useful in implementing optimal discretionary monetary policy when the policy maker has incomplete information about the environment. We find that money does not contain useful information for the policy maker, if we calibrate the model to the U.S. economy. If money demand were to be appreciably less variable, observations on money could be useful in response to productivity shocks but would be harmful in response to money demand shocks. We provide an incomplete information example where equilibrium welfare declines when the money demand volatility decreases.
Keywords: monetary policy, sticky prices, optimal time-constraint policy, asymmetric incomplete information
JEL Classification: C61, E52, E58
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Monetary Discretion, Pricing Complementarity, and Dynamic Multiple Equilibria
-
Expectation Traps and Monetary Policy
By Stefania Albanesi, Varadarajan V. Chari, ...
-
Expectation Traps and Monetary Policy
By Stefania Albanesi, Varadarajan V. Chari, ...
-
Monetary Discretion, Pricing Complementarity and Dynamic Multiple Equilibria
-
Monetary Discretion, Pricing Complementarity and Dynamic Multiple Equilibria
-
Monetary Discretion, Pricing Complementarity and Dynamic Multiple Equilibria
-
Bank Runs and Institutions: The Perils of Intervention
By Huberto M. Ennis and Todd Keister
-
The Pitfalls of Monetary Discretion
By Aubhik Khan, Robert G. King, ...