This article examines the making of monetary policy in the United Kingdom between 1997 and 2008 by analysing voting behaviour in the Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee (MPC). It provides a new set of measures for the monetary policy preferences of individual MPC members by estimating a Bayesian item response model. The article demonstrates the usefulness of these measures by comparing the ideal points of outgoing MPC members with their successors and by looking at changes over time in the median ideal point on the MPC. The analysis indicates that the British Government has been able to move the position of the median voter on the MPC through its appointments to the Committee. This highlights the importance of central bank appointme...
Abstract: This paper analyzes the voting records of four central banks (Sweden, Hungary, Poland and ...
Abstract: This paper analyzes the voting records of four central banks (Sweden, Hungary, Poland and ...
This paper analyzes the voting records of four central banks (Sweden, Hungary, Poland and the Czech ...
This article examines the making of monetary policy in the United Kingdom between 1997 and 2008 by a...
Abstract. This article examines the making of monetary policy in the United Kingdom between 1997 and...
This paper examines the making of UK monetary policy between 1997 and 2007 using an analysis of voti...
This article examines the making of monetary policy in the United Kingdom between 1997 and 2008 by a...
In this paper we estimate spatial voting models for the analysis of the voting record of the monetar...
Abstract: In this paper we estimate spatial voting models for the analysis of the voting record of t...
The MPC at the Bank of England was set up to make independent judgements about interest rate policy....
The transparency and openness of the monetary policymaking process at the Bank of England has provid...
The transparency and openness of the monetary policy-making process at the Bank of England has provi...
The transparency and openness of the monetary policymaking process at the Bank of England has provid...
Economic theory typically assumes that monetary policy is set by a single policy-maker. However, the...
The paper examines the ability of several alternative group decision-making models to generate propo...
Abstract: This paper analyzes the voting records of four central banks (Sweden, Hungary, Poland and ...
Abstract: This paper analyzes the voting records of four central banks (Sweden, Hungary, Poland and ...
This paper analyzes the voting records of four central banks (Sweden, Hungary, Poland and the Czech ...
This article examines the making of monetary policy in the United Kingdom between 1997 and 2008 by a...
Abstract. This article examines the making of monetary policy in the United Kingdom between 1997 and...
This paper examines the making of UK monetary policy between 1997 and 2007 using an analysis of voti...
This article examines the making of monetary policy in the United Kingdom between 1997 and 2008 by a...
In this paper we estimate spatial voting models for the analysis of the voting record of the monetar...
Abstract: In this paper we estimate spatial voting models for the analysis of the voting record of t...
The MPC at the Bank of England was set up to make independent judgements about interest rate policy....
The transparency and openness of the monetary policymaking process at the Bank of England has provid...
The transparency and openness of the monetary policy-making process at the Bank of England has provi...
The transparency and openness of the monetary policymaking process at the Bank of England has provid...
Economic theory typically assumes that monetary policy is set by a single policy-maker. However, the...
The paper examines the ability of several alternative group decision-making models to generate propo...
Abstract: This paper analyzes the voting records of four central banks (Sweden, Hungary, Poland and ...
Abstract: This paper analyzes the voting records of four central banks (Sweden, Hungary, Poland and ...
This paper analyzes the voting records of four central banks (Sweden, Hungary, Poland and the Czech ...