The trend of monetary policy transparency has recently extended itself to the practice of providing guidance on the likely direction of policy rates. There is a risk that communicating the central bank’s own outlook for interest rates actually undermines the financial markets’ ability to predict monetary policy. This paper analyzes this risk using the Diamond (1985) model of a financial market, which includes both costly private information acquisition and a costless public signal. We demonstrate that a sufficiently precise signal from the central bank can result in a deterioration of the financial market’s ability to predict monetary policy through the crowding out of private information acquisition. Central banks could alleviate this risk...
How should monetary policy be designed when the central bank has private information about future ec...
It is widely believed that monetary policy outcomes are generally enhanced if the conduct of policy ...
This paper contributes to the ongoing debate about the welfare effect of public information. In an e...
The trend of monetary policy transparency has recently extended itself to the practice of providing ...
Central banks worldwide have become considerably more communicative about their policies and forecas...
Theoretical results from previous work, presented in Kool, Middeldorp and Rosenkranz (2007), suggest...
Central banks have become increasingly communicative. An important reason is that democratic societi...
We study credible information transmission by a benevolent short-lived central bank. We consider two...
We study credible information transmission by a benevolent Central Bank. We consider two possibiliti...
We propose a signalling model in which the central bank and firms receive information on cost-push s...
As communication becomes an increasingly important monetary policy tool, central banks must consider...
This paper develops a simple model to examine conditions under which a monetary policy-making author...
An important change in central bank practices has occurred over the past decade: the adoption of gre...
The authors study credible information transmission by a benevolent central bank. They consider two ...
This paper contributes to the ongoing debate about the welfare effect of public information. In an e...
How should monetary policy be designed when the central bank has private information about future ec...
It is widely believed that monetary policy outcomes are generally enhanced if the conduct of policy ...
This paper contributes to the ongoing debate about the welfare effect of public information. In an e...
The trend of monetary policy transparency has recently extended itself to the practice of providing ...
Central banks worldwide have become considerably more communicative about their policies and forecas...
Theoretical results from previous work, presented in Kool, Middeldorp and Rosenkranz (2007), suggest...
Central banks have become increasingly communicative. An important reason is that democratic societi...
We study credible information transmission by a benevolent short-lived central bank. We consider two...
We study credible information transmission by a benevolent Central Bank. We consider two possibiliti...
We propose a signalling model in which the central bank and firms receive information on cost-push s...
As communication becomes an increasingly important monetary policy tool, central banks must consider...
This paper develops a simple model to examine conditions under which a monetary policy-making author...
An important change in central bank practices has occurred over the past decade: the adoption of gre...
The authors study credible information transmission by a benevolent central bank. They consider two ...
This paper contributes to the ongoing debate about the welfare effect of public information. In an e...
How should monetary policy be designed when the central bank has private information about future ec...
It is widely believed that monetary policy outcomes are generally enhanced if the conduct of policy ...
This paper contributes to the ongoing debate about the welfare effect of public information. In an e...