The paper re-examines whether the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy was a source of instability during the Great Inflation by estimating a sticky-price model with positive trend inflation, commodity price shocks and sluggish real wages. Our estimation provides empirical evidence for substantial wage rigidity and finds that the Federal Reserve responded aggressively to inflation but negligibly to the output gap. In the presence of non-trivial real imperfections and well-identified commodity price-shocks, U.S. data prefers a determinate version of the New Keynesian model: monetary policy-induced indeterminacy and sunspots were not causes of macroeconomic instability during the pre-Volcker era. However, had the Federal Reserve in the Seventies...
We argue in this paper that the Great Ination of the 1970s can be understood as the result of equili...
This paper investigates whether the presence of financial frictions can help explain the differences...
This study disentangles the policy parameters from those describing the behavior of the private sect...
I estimate a forward-looking monetary policy reaction function for the Federal Reserve for the perio...
We develop an estimated model of the U.S. economy in which agents form expectations by continually u...
This paper documents the evolution of long-run inflation expectations and models the stance of monet...
This paper argues that the Federal Reserve’s failure to control inflation during the 1970s was due t...
Can U.S. monetary policy in the 1970s be described by a stabilizing Taylor rule when policy is evalu...
This paper attempts to characterize the monetary policy regimes in the United States and analyze the...
Can U.S. monetary policy in the 1970s be described by a stabilizing Taylor rule with a two percent i...
The U.S. Great Inflation of the 1970s was characterized by repeated, failed attempts at disinflation...
In recent years, activist monetary policy rules responding to inflation and the level of economic ac...
This paper uses the conventional wisdom about the shift in the monetary policy stance in 1979 to com...
inflation, at least at any politically acceptable cost (Burns, 1979). A survey of six then-recent em...
This paper estimates a New Keynesian model to draw inferences about the behavior of the Federal Rese...
We argue in this paper that the Great Ination of the 1970s can be understood as the result of equili...
This paper investigates whether the presence of financial frictions can help explain the differences...
This study disentangles the policy parameters from those describing the behavior of the private sect...
I estimate a forward-looking monetary policy reaction function for the Federal Reserve for the perio...
We develop an estimated model of the U.S. economy in which agents form expectations by continually u...
This paper documents the evolution of long-run inflation expectations and models the stance of monet...
This paper argues that the Federal Reserve’s failure to control inflation during the 1970s was due t...
Can U.S. monetary policy in the 1970s be described by a stabilizing Taylor rule when policy is evalu...
This paper attempts to characterize the monetary policy regimes in the United States and analyze the...
Can U.S. monetary policy in the 1970s be described by a stabilizing Taylor rule with a two percent i...
The U.S. Great Inflation of the 1970s was characterized by repeated, failed attempts at disinflation...
In recent years, activist monetary policy rules responding to inflation and the level of economic ac...
This paper uses the conventional wisdom about the shift in the monetary policy stance in 1979 to com...
inflation, at least at any politically acceptable cost (Burns, 1979). A survey of six then-recent em...
This paper estimates a New Keynesian model to draw inferences about the behavior of the Federal Rese...
We argue in this paper that the Great Ination of the 1970s can be understood as the result of equili...
This paper investigates whether the presence of financial frictions can help explain the differences...
This study disentangles the policy parameters from those describing the behavior of the private sect...