The stabilization effects of Taylor rules are analyzed in a limited participation framework with and without credit market imperfections in capital goods production. Financial frictions substantially amplify the impact of shocks, and also reinforce the stabilizing or destabilizing effects of interest rate rules. However, these effects are reversed relative to New Keynesian models: under limited participation, interest rate rules are stabilizing for technology shocks, but imply an output-inflation tradeoff for demand shocks. Moreover, because financial frictions imply excessive fluctuation, stabilization via an interest rate rule can be a welfare-improving response to technology shocks
The adoption of a Taylor-type monetary policy rule and an inflation target for emerging market econo...
We extend the basic (representative-household) New Keynesian (NK) model of the monetary transmission...
This paper derives new results on the effects of employing Taylor rules in economies that are subjec...
The stabilization effects of Taylor rules are analyzed in a limited participation framework with and...
The stabilization effects of Taylor rules are analyzed in a limited participation framework with and...
We study optimal operational interest rate rules in two prototype economies with sticky prices and c...
We study optimal Taylor-type interest rate rules in an economy with credit mar-ket imperfections. Ou...
This paper investigates whether the presence of financial frictions can help explain the differences...
I develop a model for monetary policy analysis that features significant feedback from asset prices ...
The authors use the limited participation model of money to study Taylor rules' operating characteri...
We study optimal Taylor-type interest rate rules in an economy with credit mar-ket imperfections. Ou...
This paper investigates the performance of monetary policy rules in a crediteconomy. In particular, ...
Using an estimated dynamic stochastic general equilibrium model with banking, this paper first provi...
The inertia found in econometric estimates of interest rate rules is a continuing puzzle. Many reaso...
This paper analyzes the contribution of additional factors, apart from monetary policy, to the stabi...
The adoption of a Taylor-type monetary policy rule and an inflation target for emerging market econo...
We extend the basic (representative-household) New Keynesian (NK) model of the monetary transmission...
This paper derives new results on the effects of employing Taylor rules in economies that are subjec...
The stabilization effects of Taylor rules are analyzed in a limited participation framework with and...
The stabilization effects of Taylor rules are analyzed in a limited participation framework with and...
We study optimal operational interest rate rules in two prototype economies with sticky prices and c...
We study optimal Taylor-type interest rate rules in an economy with credit mar-ket imperfections. Ou...
This paper investigates whether the presence of financial frictions can help explain the differences...
I develop a model for monetary policy analysis that features significant feedback from asset prices ...
The authors use the limited participation model of money to study Taylor rules' operating characteri...
We study optimal Taylor-type interest rate rules in an economy with credit mar-ket imperfections. Ou...
This paper investigates the performance of monetary policy rules in a crediteconomy. In particular, ...
Using an estimated dynamic stochastic general equilibrium model with banking, this paper first provi...
The inertia found in econometric estimates of interest rate rules is a continuing puzzle. Many reaso...
This paper analyzes the contribution of additional factors, apart from monetary policy, to the stabi...
The adoption of a Taylor-type monetary policy rule and an inflation target for emerging market econo...
We extend the basic (representative-household) New Keynesian (NK) model of the monetary transmission...
This paper derives new results on the effects of employing Taylor rules in economies that are subjec...