In stark contrast to the previous literature, we find that IT leads to price indeterminacy even when the central bank uses a Taylor-like feedback rule to peg the nominal interest rate. We also find that there is no mechanism with IT to determine the current inflation rate or price level. We conclude that the previous literature has either committed mathematical errors involving infinity or misused the non-explosive criterion for ruling out speculative bubbles. To avoid making errors involving infinity, we analyze inflation targeting (IT) in a typical rational-expectations, pure-exchange, general-equilibrium model where the time horizon is arbitrarily large, but finite
This note explains why inflation follows a seemingly exogenous statistical process, unrelated to the...
Price level targeting has been proposed as an alternative to inflation targeting that may confer ben...
The near‐universal practice of inflation targeting has strengthened the belief of central banks that...
In stark contrast to the previous literature, we find that IT leads to price indeterminacy even when...
This paper proposes a new methodology for assessing price indeterminacy to supplant the discredited ...
I study whether money growth targeting leads to indeterminacy in the price level. I extend a convent...
This paper demonstrates that in a standard monetary model with a cash-in-advance constraint on consu...
The economic profession should demand that that price-determinacy literature adhere to normal academ...
Since the 2007 crisis, macroeconomists have been interested in monetary policies that could help wit...
The mainstream inflation-targeting literature makes the strong assumption that the central bank can ...
This paper can be divided into two main parts. The first one, using a simple example by Minford (200...
This paper argues that the adoption of an inflation target reduces the persistence of inflation. We...
Monetary policy is sometimes formulated in terms of a target level of inflation, a fixed time horizo...
Recent research has suggested that in deriving optimal policy under discretion, policymakers should ...
We use concepts from the financial economics discipline – and in particular the methods of continuou...
This note explains why inflation follows a seemingly exogenous statistical process, unrelated to the...
Price level targeting has been proposed as an alternative to inflation targeting that may confer ben...
The near‐universal practice of inflation targeting has strengthened the belief of central banks that...
In stark contrast to the previous literature, we find that IT leads to price indeterminacy even when...
This paper proposes a new methodology for assessing price indeterminacy to supplant the discredited ...
I study whether money growth targeting leads to indeterminacy in the price level. I extend a convent...
This paper demonstrates that in a standard monetary model with a cash-in-advance constraint on consu...
The economic profession should demand that that price-determinacy literature adhere to normal academ...
Since the 2007 crisis, macroeconomists have been interested in monetary policies that could help wit...
The mainstream inflation-targeting literature makes the strong assumption that the central bank can ...
This paper can be divided into two main parts. The first one, using a simple example by Minford (200...
This paper argues that the adoption of an inflation target reduces the persistence of inflation. We...
Monetary policy is sometimes formulated in terms of a target level of inflation, a fixed time horizo...
Recent research has suggested that in deriving optimal policy under discretion, policymakers should ...
We use concepts from the financial economics discipline – and in particular the methods of continuou...
This note explains why inflation follows a seemingly exogenous statistical process, unrelated to the...
Price level targeting has been proposed as an alternative to inflation targeting that may confer ben...
The near‐universal practice of inflation targeting has strengthened the belief of central banks that...