This paper investigates policy deviations from linear Taylor rules motivated by the risk management approach followed by the Fed during the Greenspan era. We estimate a nonlinear monetary policy rule via a logistic smoothing transition regression model where policy-makers’ judgment, proxied by economically meaningful variables, drives the transition across policy regimes. We find that ignoring judgment-induced nonlinearities while estimating Taylor rules has remarkable costs in terms of fit: above 250 bps in 10 quarters. Although linear Taylor rules describe well the broad contours of monetary policy, they fail to detect relevant policy decisions driven by policy-makers’ judgment
This paper derives optimal monetary policy rules in setups where certainty equivalence does not hold...
The monetary economics literature has highlighted four issues that are important in evaluating US mo...
We analyze the influence of the Taylor rule on US monetary policy by estimating the policy preferenc...
This paper investigates policy deviations from linear Taylor rules motivated by the risk management ...
R ecent research has highlighted several aspects of monetary policy un-der Chairman Alan Greenspan, ...
The Taylor rule has become one of the most studied strategies for monetary policy. Yet, little is kn...
This paper extends the work in Orphanides (2003) by re-examining the empirical evidence for a Taylor...
The Taylor-rule has become one of the most studied strategies for monetary policy. Yet, little is kn...
We examine US monetary policies from 1973 to 2014 with the Taylor rule as a benchmark by utilizing a...
Early research on the Taylor rule typically divided the data exogenously into pre-Volcker and Volcke...
The Taylor rule has been the dominant metric for monetary policy evaluation over the past 20 years, ...
The original Taylor rule establishes a simple linear relation between the interest rate, inflation a...
The Taylor rule has revolutionized the way many policymakers at central banks think about monetary p...
This paper estimates Taylor rules featuring instabilities in policy parameters and switches in polic...
This paper derives optimal monetary policy rules in setups where certainty equiva-lence does not hol...
This paper derives optimal monetary policy rules in setups where certainty equivalence does not hold...
The monetary economics literature has highlighted four issues that are important in evaluating US mo...
We analyze the influence of the Taylor rule on US monetary policy by estimating the policy preferenc...
This paper investigates policy deviations from linear Taylor rules motivated by the risk management ...
R ecent research has highlighted several aspects of monetary policy un-der Chairman Alan Greenspan, ...
The Taylor rule has become one of the most studied strategies for monetary policy. Yet, little is kn...
This paper extends the work in Orphanides (2003) by re-examining the empirical evidence for a Taylor...
The Taylor-rule has become one of the most studied strategies for monetary policy. Yet, little is kn...
We examine US monetary policies from 1973 to 2014 with the Taylor rule as a benchmark by utilizing a...
Early research on the Taylor rule typically divided the data exogenously into pre-Volcker and Volcke...
The Taylor rule has been the dominant metric for monetary policy evaluation over the past 20 years, ...
The original Taylor rule establishes a simple linear relation between the interest rate, inflation a...
The Taylor rule has revolutionized the way many policymakers at central banks think about monetary p...
This paper estimates Taylor rules featuring instabilities in policy parameters and switches in polic...
This paper derives optimal monetary policy rules in setups where certainty equiva-lence does not hol...
This paper derives optimal monetary policy rules in setups where certainty equivalence does not hold...
The monetary economics literature has highlighted four issues that are important in evaluating US mo...
We analyze the influence of the Taylor rule on US monetary policy by estimating the policy preferenc...