Almost all economists know the story about the (drunk) person searching for his lost wallet in the night under the lamp-post, not because that was the most likely place to have dropped his wallet, but because that was where the light was. I shall argue here that this story is fitting in the case of Taylor-type Central Bank reaction functions. These functions indicate how Central Banks might adjust interest rates in response to deviations of current inflation and current output from some desired level, so that, it = a + b(ðt - ð*) + b2yt + b3it-1 (1) where i is the nominal interest rate, ð the current rate of inflation, y is the estimated output gap, and the final term (b3it-1) is usually included to account for the empirical evidence of aut...
This paper considers how monetary policy is modelled currently, with particular reference to the Res...
This paper makes three main points. First, whereas the Monetary Policy Committee's forecasts of infl...
Monetary policy has been given either too many positive attributes or, in contrast, only economy-dis...
After many decades during which mainstream economic theorists posited that Central Banks either did,...
Since Taylor’s 1993 paper researchers have devoted a lot effort to estimation of monetary policy rul...
In a variety of recent papers, researchers have found that interest rate behaviour approximately fol...
This paper is an empirical investigation into the question of whether increased independence affects...
While the degree of policy inertia in central banks’ reaction functions is a central ingredient in t...
The Taylor rule establishes a simple linear relation between the interest rate, inflation and output...
The Taylor rule establishes a simple linear relation between the interest rate, inflation and output...
This paper uses the conventional wisdom about the shift in the monetary policy stance in 1979 to com...
The original Taylor rule establishes a simple linear relation between the interest rate, inflation a...
Since the days of David Hume (1711–1776), if not even earlier, economists have been studying monetar...
The classical Taylor rules usually do not yield the same estimation error when working in a monthly ...
Introduction: Monetary policy is the central tool for maintaining price stability and it has become ...
This paper considers how monetary policy is modelled currently, with particular reference to the Res...
This paper makes three main points. First, whereas the Monetary Policy Committee's forecasts of infl...
Monetary policy has been given either too many positive attributes or, in contrast, only economy-dis...
After many decades during which mainstream economic theorists posited that Central Banks either did,...
Since Taylor’s 1993 paper researchers have devoted a lot effort to estimation of monetary policy rul...
In a variety of recent papers, researchers have found that interest rate behaviour approximately fol...
This paper is an empirical investigation into the question of whether increased independence affects...
While the degree of policy inertia in central banks’ reaction functions is a central ingredient in t...
The Taylor rule establishes a simple linear relation between the interest rate, inflation and output...
The Taylor rule establishes a simple linear relation between the interest rate, inflation and output...
This paper uses the conventional wisdom about the shift in the monetary policy stance in 1979 to com...
The original Taylor rule establishes a simple linear relation between the interest rate, inflation a...
Since the days of David Hume (1711–1776), if not even earlier, economists have been studying monetar...
The classical Taylor rules usually do not yield the same estimation error when working in a monthly ...
Introduction: Monetary policy is the central tool for maintaining price stability and it has become ...
This paper considers how monetary policy is modelled currently, with particular reference to the Res...
This paper makes three main points. First, whereas the Monetary Policy Committee's forecasts of infl...
Monetary policy has been given either too many positive attributes or, in contrast, only economy-dis...