2005
DOI: 10.1017/s1365100505040253
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Interest and Prices: Foundations of a Theory of Monetary Policy

Abstract: The evolution of research on monetary policy over the past two decades has been dramatic. The 1980's through the mid-1990's were dominated by work building on the insights of Kydland and Prescott, employing the notion of dynamic consistency to offer a theory of monetary policy, one in which discretionary policy by central banks led to socially costly inflation. Researchers studied the nature of the time inconsistency of monetary policy and developed solutions, ranging from appointing conservatives, to developi… Show more

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Cited by 3,095 publications
(4,471 citation statements)
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References 8 publications
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“…6 The value assigned to i preserves the ratio i = x . The ratio is roughly 26 in Woodford (2003) 9 re ‡ect information available with the bene…t of hindsight. The di¤erence between the revised and real-time estimates represents historical revisions, which are described quite well with a standard, …rst-order autoregressive process.…”
Section: Calibration and Measurement Errorsmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…6 The value assigned to i preserves the ratio i = x . The ratio is roughly 26 in Woodford (2003) 9 re ‡ect information available with the bene…t of hindsight. The di¤erence between the revised and real-time estimates represents historical revisions, which are described quite well with a standard, …rst-order autoregressive process.…”
Section: Calibration and Measurement Errorsmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…We look into the factors behind the differences. There are a few welfare approximations in terms of key macroeconomic variables, basically extending the approximation for a closed economy proposed by Stock prices EME's policy rate US federal funds rate Woodford (2003). These are usually called loss functions, which are deemed as the objective function of policy authorities.…”
Section: A Do Emerging Market Economy Responses Depend On Their Econmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Of course, this argument depends on the weights placed on inflation and output gap in the loss function. For an open economy, Woodford (2003) makes the relative weights between output gap and inflation the same as for a closed economy, although inflation in the loss function usually stands for inflation of domestic goods (Corsetti, Dedola, and Leduc 2010). A typical calibration of parameters results in a low weight on the output gap.…”
Section: Counterfactual Exercise: Mimicking Low-inflation Economiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…-and . 37 We start with the case of strategic neutrality in price setting ( = 1). Then, new prices are set according to:…”
Section: B1 Transformation Of the Sectoral Weightsmentioning
confidence: 99%