Most countries experienced high and volatile inflation during the 1970s and part of the 1980s, and low and stable inflation thereafter. Professor Besley argues that the main contrast between these two periods is a significant change in central bank responses to inflation. Periods of high and volatile inflation were associated with negative real interest rates (ie the policy rate adjusted for inflation) in nine industrialised economies, which can be interpreted as symptomatic of a relaxed monetary policy. The most recent period of low and stable inflation is characterised, in contrast, by positive real rates of interest. The experience of the past suggests that using monetary policy to support the economy in the face of negative productivity...
Since the invention of money, pressure to finance government debt and deficits, directly or indirect...
Following up on Glatzer, Gnan and Valderrama (2006), we investigate two further channels through whi...
We argue that although UK monetary policy can be described using a Taylor rule in 1992-2007, this ru...
In this speech, Professor David Blanchflower, member of the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC), talks a...
This paper uses tools from the classical theory of inflation for UK Consumer Price Inflation from 19...
This paper estimates a variety of models of inflation using quarterly data for the UK between 1965 ...
© 2019 Elsevier B.V. This paper uses tools from the classical theory of inflation for UK Consumer Pr...
Over the last decade, the developed world has been hit by the deepest recession since the Great Depr...
In this speech (given at the CFSresearch conference on the Implementation of Price Stability held at...
The well-known economist Professor Tim Congdon has attacked the Bank of England (BoE) in an op-ed in...
Since the beginning of the crisis, inflation rates have shown a clear downward trend in many advance...
There is no consensus over the importance of “global forces” on inflation. This study explores the r...
For a quarter of a century, the western world has enjoyed a macroeconomic environment characterized ...
Although the economic recovery in the UK has been disappointing, it is inappropriate to either asser...
With inflation exceeding the official Bank of England target for the eighteenth month in a row, Tony...
Since the invention of money, pressure to finance government debt and deficits, directly or indirect...
Following up on Glatzer, Gnan and Valderrama (2006), we investigate two further channels through whi...
We argue that although UK monetary policy can be described using a Taylor rule in 1992-2007, this ru...
In this speech, Professor David Blanchflower, member of the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC), talks a...
This paper uses tools from the classical theory of inflation for UK Consumer Price Inflation from 19...
This paper estimates a variety of models of inflation using quarterly data for the UK between 1965 ...
© 2019 Elsevier B.V. This paper uses tools from the classical theory of inflation for UK Consumer Pr...
Over the last decade, the developed world has been hit by the deepest recession since the Great Depr...
In this speech (given at the CFSresearch conference on the Implementation of Price Stability held at...
The well-known economist Professor Tim Congdon has attacked the Bank of England (BoE) in an op-ed in...
Since the beginning of the crisis, inflation rates have shown a clear downward trend in many advance...
There is no consensus over the importance of “global forces” on inflation. This study explores the r...
For a quarter of a century, the western world has enjoyed a macroeconomic environment characterized ...
Although the economic recovery in the UK has been disappointing, it is inappropriate to either asser...
With inflation exceeding the official Bank of England target for the eighteenth month in a row, Tony...
Since the invention of money, pressure to finance government debt and deficits, directly or indirect...
Following up on Glatzer, Gnan and Valderrama (2006), we investigate two further channels through whi...
We argue that although UK monetary policy can be described using a Taylor rule in 1992-2007, this ru...