Abstract. The Fed and private forecasters have not been able to forecast inflation and GDP growth very well and have assessed incorrectly the effects of monetary policy actions on these variables. The mistakes are quantitatively different across three monetary regimes studied here, but we also find significant qualitative similarity in the errors of assessing the stabilization effects of monetary policy. Over the period of study (1965-1995) we find that (i) for long horizons the Fed and private inflation forecasts (i.e. over 3 quarters) either underestimated or overestimated future developments: during low inflation the forecasts were too low and during high inflation they were too high. The same pattern is true for GDP growth forecasting b...
Monetary policy analysts often rely on rules of thumb, such as the Taylor rule, to describe historic...
In recent years, activist monetary policy rules responding to inflation and the level of economic ac...
Whether people form their expectations of the future in a model-consistent or extrapolative manner, ...
This paper investigates the role that imperfect knowledge about the structure of the economy plays i...
This paper evaluates the potential impact of forecast errors on policy. We jointly evaluate the Fede...
December 2001 We provide evidence that private forecasters and the staff of the Federal Reserve use ...
Some Lessons of Monetary Management Many central banks rely on forecasts to make discretionary ...
In the first of three related, and consecutive, papers we showed that forecasts for short-term polic...
How might central bank communication of its internal forecasts assist the conduct of monetary policy...
We examine the relative improvement in forecasting accuracy of the Federal Reserve (Greenbook foreca...
An examination of GNP forecasts and their implications for monetary policy, showing that although su...
What rule should a central bank interested in inflation stability follow? Because monetary policy te...
We hypothesize that if monetary policy is important in explaining movements in output and inflation ...
This paper evaluates the role of inflation-forecast heterogeneity in US monetary policy making. The ...
Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) projections are important because they provide information for ...
Monetary policy analysts often rely on rules of thumb, such as the Taylor rule, to describe historic...
In recent years, activist monetary policy rules responding to inflation and the level of economic ac...
Whether people form their expectations of the future in a model-consistent or extrapolative manner, ...
This paper investigates the role that imperfect knowledge about the structure of the economy plays i...
This paper evaluates the potential impact of forecast errors on policy. We jointly evaluate the Fede...
December 2001 We provide evidence that private forecasters and the staff of the Federal Reserve use ...
Some Lessons of Monetary Management Many central banks rely on forecasts to make discretionary ...
In the first of three related, and consecutive, papers we showed that forecasts for short-term polic...
How might central bank communication of its internal forecasts assist the conduct of monetary policy...
We examine the relative improvement in forecasting accuracy of the Federal Reserve (Greenbook foreca...
An examination of GNP forecasts and their implications for monetary policy, showing that although su...
What rule should a central bank interested in inflation stability follow? Because monetary policy te...
We hypothesize that if monetary policy is important in explaining movements in output and inflation ...
This paper evaluates the role of inflation-forecast heterogeneity in US monetary policy making. The ...
Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) projections are important because they provide information for ...
Monetary policy analysts often rely on rules of thumb, such as the Taylor rule, to describe historic...
In recent years, activist monetary policy rules responding to inflation and the level of economic ac...
Whether people form their expectations of the future in a model-consistent or extrapolative manner, ...