Optimal Degrees of Transparency in Monetary Policymarking
32 Pages Posted: 28 Feb 2001
Date Written: February 2001
Abstract
According to most academics and policy-makers, transparency in monetary policy-making is desirable. I examine this proposition in a small theoretical model emphasizing forward-looking private sector behaviour. Transparency makes it easier for price setters to infer the central bank's future policy intentions, thereby making current inflation more responsive to policy actions. This induces the central bank to pay more attention to inflation rather than output gap stabilization. Then, transparency may be disadvantageous. It may actually be a policy distorting straitjacket if the central bank enjoys low-inflation credibility, and there is need for active monetary stabilization policy.
Keywords: Central Bank Institutions, Monetary Policy, Transparency
JEL Classification: E42, E52
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
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