TY - UNPB
T1 - The Role of Expectations in Economic Fluctuations and the Efficay of Monetary Policy
AU - Motolese, Maurizio
AU - Kurz, Mordecai
AU - Jin, Hehui
PY - 2003
Y1 - 2003
N2 - We show diverse beliefs is an important propagation mechanism of fluctuations, money non neutrality and efficacy of monetary policy. Since expectations affect demand, our theory shows economic fluctuations are mostly driven by varying demand not supply shocks. Using a competitive model with flexible prices in which agents hold Rational Belief (see Kurz (1994)) we show that (i) our economy replicates well the empirical record of fluctuations in the U.S. (ii) Under monetary rules without discretion, monetary policy has a strong stabilization effect and an aggressive anti-inflationary policy can reduce inflation volatility to zero. (iii) The statistical Phillips Curve changes substantially with policy instruments and activist policy rules render it vertical. (iv) Although prices are flexible, money shocks result in less than proportional changes in inflation hence the aggregate price level appears ¿sticky¿ with respect to money shocks. (v) Discretion in monetary policy adds a random element to policy and
increases volatility. The impact of discretion on the efficacy of policy depends upon the structure of market beliefs about future discretionary decisions. We study two rationalizable beliefs. In one case, market beliefs weaken the effect of policy and in the second, beliefs bolster policy outcomes and discretion could be a desirable attribute of the policy rule. Since the central bank does not know any more than the private sector, real social gain from discretion arise only in extraordinary cases. Hence, the weight of the argument leads us to conclude that bank¿s policy should be transparent and abandon discretion except for rare and unusual circumstances. (vi) An implication of our model suggests the current effective policy is only mildly activist and aims mostly to target inflation.
AB - We show diverse beliefs is an important propagation mechanism of fluctuations, money non neutrality and efficacy of monetary policy. Since expectations affect demand, our theory shows economic fluctuations are mostly driven by varying demand not supply shocks. Using a competitive model with flexible prices in which agents hold Rational Belief (see Kurz (1994)) we show that (i) our economy replicates well the empirical record of fluctuations in the U.S. (ii) Under monetary rules without discretion, monetary policy has a strong stabilization effect and an aggressive anti-inflationary policy can reduce inflation volatility to zero. (iii) The statistical Phillips Curve changes substantially with policy instruments and activist policy rules render it vertical. (iv) Although prices are flexible, money shocks result in less than proportional changes in inflation hence the aggregate price level appears ¿sticky¿ with respect to money shocks. (v) Discretion in monetary policy adds a random element to policy and
increases volatility. The impact of discretion on the efficacy of policy depends upon the structure of market beliefs about future discretionary decisions. We study two rationalizable beliefs. In one case, market beliefs weaken the effect of policy and in the second, beliefs bolster policy outcomes and discretion could be a desirable attribute of the policy rule. Since the central bank does not know any more than the private sector, real social gain from discretion arise only in extraordinary cases. Hence, the weight of the argument leads us to conclude that bank¿s policy should be transparent and abandon discretion except for rare and unusual circumstances. (vi) An implication of our model suggests the current effective policy is only mildly activist and aims mostly to target inflation.
KW - Business cycles
KW - Capacity utilization
KW - Empirical distribution
KW - Heterogeneous beliefs
KW - Market volatility
KW - Monetary Policy
KW - Monetary Policy Rules
KW - Money non neutrality
KW - Non stationarity
KW - Optimism
KW - Over confidence
KW - Pessimism
KW - Phillips Curve
KW - Propagation Mechanism
KW - Rational Beliefs
KW - Business cycles
KW - Capacity utilization
KW - Empirical distribution
KW - Heterogeneous beliefs
KW - Market volatility
KW - Monetary Policy
KW - Monetary Policy Rules
KW - Money non neutrality
KW - Non stationarity
KW - Optimism
KW - Over confidence
KW - Pessimism
KW - Phillips Curve
KW - Propagation Mechanism
KW - Rational Beliefs
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10807/14237
M3 - Working paper
BT - The Role of Expectations in Economic Fluctuations and the Efficay of Monetary Policy
ER -