Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- List of contributors
- Foreword
- Introduction
- I Monetary institutions and policy
- 1 Reputational versus institutional solutions to the time-consistency problem in monetary policy
- 2 Reciprocity and political business cycles in federal monetary unions
- 3 The ultimate determinants of central bank independence
- 4 Central bank autonomy and exchange rate regimes – their effects on monetary accommodation and activism
- 5 Uncertainty, instrument choice, and the uniqueness of Nash equilibrium: microeconomic and macroeconomic examples
- 6 New empirical evidence on the costs of European Monetary Union
- II Exchange rate policy and redistribution
- Index
1 - Reputational versus institutional solutions to the time-consistency problem in monetary policy
from I - Monetary institutions and policy
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 September 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- List of contributors
- Foreword
- Introduction
- I Monetary institutions and policy
- 1 Reputational versus institutional solutions to the time-consistency problem in monetary policy
- 2 Reciprocity and political business cycles in federal monetary unions
- 3 The ultimate determinants of central bank independence
- 4 Central bank autonomy and exchange rate regimes – their effects on monetary accommodation and activism
- 5 Uncertainty, instrument choice, and the uniqueness of Nash equilibrium: microeconomic and macroeconomic examples
- 6 New empirical evidence on the costs of European Monetary Union
- II Exchange rate policy and redistribution
- Index
Summary
Introduction
The classic time-consistency problem results in a counterproductive inflation bias to discretionary monetary policy (Kydland and Prescott, 1977; Barro and Gordon, 1983). The standard formulation of the problem is based on the following time sequence of events: wage setters negotiate nominal wage contracts, setting wage growth equal to expected inflation; the policy maker then sets the inflation rate. Output is stimulated if the inflation rate exceeds the nominal wage growth fixed in the wage setters' contracts. However, such output stimulation comes at the price of increased inflation. The equilibrium inflation rate trades off the policy maker's output stimulation and inflation stabilization goals. Wage setters are rational and thus understand the policy maker's decision rule. Consequently, their inflation expectations do not systematically deviate from actual inflation. It follows that, in equilibrium, the policy maker cannot stimulate output, but her futile attempt to do so leads to an inflation bias. The policy maker would be better off if she could credibly commit herself to refraining from attempting to stimulate output. Since she cannot fulfill her output goal, she could then at least achieve her inflation goal.
The reputational solution
In an infinite-horizon repeated game setting, there exists a reputational solution to the time-consistency problem in monetary policy (Barro and Gordon, 1983); that is, the inflation bias can be reduced via reputational trigger-punishment strategies (Friedman, 1971).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Positive Political EconomyTheory and Evidence, pp. 9 - 22Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1998
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