Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-dzt6s Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T06:19:17.835Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

A NOTE ON NOMINAL GDP TARGETING AND THE ZERO LOWER BOUND

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 May 2016

Roberto M. Billi*
Affiliation:
Sveriges Riksbank
*
Address correspondence to: Roberto M. Billi, Research Division, Sveriges Riksbank, SE-103 37 Stockholm, Sweden; e-mail: [email protected].

Abstract

I compare nominal gross domestic product (GDP) level targeting with strict price level targeting in a small New Keynesian model, with the central bank operating under optimal discretion and facing a zero lower bound on nominal interest rates. I show that, if the economy is only buffeted by purely temporary shocks to inflation, nominal GDP level targeting may be preferable because it requires the burden of the shocks to be shared by prices and output. However, in the presence of persistent supply and demand shocks, strict price level targeting may be superior because it induces greater policy inertia and improves the tradeoffs faced by the central bank. During lower bound episodes, somewhat paradoxically, nominal GDP level targeting leads to larger falls in nominal GDP.

Type
Notes
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2016 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

I thank for valuable comments Bill English, Bob Hall, Keith Kuester, Scott Sumner, Carl Walsh, seminar participants at Danmarks Nationalbank, Sveriges Riksbank, and University of Glasgow Adam Smith Business School, as well as conference participants at CEF, EEA, and NASM. The views expressed herein are solely the responsibility of the author and should not be interpreted as reflecting the views of Sveriges Riksbank.

References

REFERENCES

Adam, Klaus and Billi, Roberto M. (2006) Optimal monetary policy under commitment with a zero bound on nominal interest rates. Journal of Money, Credit and Banking 38, 18771905.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Adam, Klaus and Billi, Roberto M. (2007) Discretionary monetary policy and the zero lower bound on nominal interest rates. Journal of Monetary Economics 54, 728752.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bean, Charles R. (1983) Targeting nominal income: An appraisal. Economic Journal 93, 806819.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Billi, Roberto M. (2011) Optimal inflation for the U.S. economy. American Economic Journal: Macro-economics 3, 2952.Google Scholar
Coibion, Olivier, Gorodnichenko, Yuriy, and Wieland, Johannes (2012) The optimal inflation rate in New Keynesian models: Should central banks raise their inflation targets in light of the ZLB? Review of Economic Studies 79, 13711406.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eggertsson, Gauti B. and Woodford, Michael (2003) The zero bound on interest rates and optimal monetary policy. Brookings Papers on Economic Activity 34, 139235.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
English, William B., Lopez-Salido, J. David, and Tetlow, Robert J. (2015) The Federal Reserve's framework for monetary policy: Recent changes and new questions. IMF Economic Review 63, 2270.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Frankel, Jeffrey (2013) Nominal-GDP targets, without losing the inflation anchor. In Reichlin, Lucrezia and Baldwin, Richard (eds.), Is Inflation Targeting Dead? Central Banking after the Crisis, pp. 9094. London: CEPR, VoxEU.org.Google Scholar
Giannoni, Marc P. (2014) Optimal interest rate rules and inflation stabilization versus price-level stabilization. Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control 41, 110129.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hall, Robert E. and Mankiw, N. Gregory (1994) Nominal income targeting. In Mankiw, N. Gregory (ed.) Monetary Policy, pp. 7193. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Hatzius, Jan and Stehn, Sven Jari (2011) The Case for a Nominal GDP Level Target. Goldman Sachs US Economics Analyst 11/41, October 14.Google Scholar
Hatzius, Jan and Stehn, Sven Jari (2013) A nominal GDP level target in all but name. Goldman Sachs US Economics Analyst 13/03, January 20.Google Scholar
Jensen, Henrik (2002) Targeting nominal income growth or inflation? American Economic Review 92, 928956.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McCallum, Bennet T. (1988) Robustness properties of a rule for monetary policy. Carnegie-Rochester Conference Series on Public Policy 29, 173204.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Meade, James E. (1978) The meaning of internal balance. Economic Journal 88, 423435.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nakov, Anton (2008) Optimal and simple monetary policy rules with zero floor on the nominal interest rate. International Journal of Central Banking 4, 73127.Google Scholar
Sumner, Scott B. (2011) Re-targeting the Fed. National Affairs (Fall, 9), 79–96.Google Scholar
Sumner, Scott B. (2014) Nominal GDP targeting: A simple rule to improve Fed performance. Cato Journal 34, 315337.Google Scholar
Svensson, Lars E.O. (1999) Price-level targeting versus inflation targeting: A free lunch? Journal of Money, Credit and Banking 31, 277295.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Svensson, Lars E.O. (2003) Escaping from a liquidity trap and deflation: The foolproof way and others. Journal of Economic Perspectives 17, 145166.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Svensson, Lars E.O. (2010) Monetary policy and financial markets at the effective lower bound. Journal of Money, Credit and Banking 42 (Supplement), 229242.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Taylor, John B. (1985) What would nominal GNP targeting do to the business cycle? Carnegie-Rochester Conference Series on Public Policy 22, 6184.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Taylor, John B. and Williams, John C. (2010) Simple and robust rules for monetary policy. In Friedman, Benjamin M. and Woodford, Michael (eds.), Handbook of Monetary Economics, Vol. 3, Chap. 15, pp. 829859. Amsterdam: Elsevier.Google Scholar
Tobin, James (1980) Stabilization policy ten years after. Brookings Papers on Economic Activity 11, 1990.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vestin, David (2006) Price-level versus inflation targeting. Journal of Monetary Economics 53, 13611376.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Walsh, Carl E. (2003) Speed limit policies: The output gap and optimal monetary policy. American Economic Review 93, 265278.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
West, Kenneth D. (1986) Targeting nominal income: A note. Economic Journal 96, 10771083.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Woodford, Michael (2010) Optimal monetary stabilization policy. In Friedman, Benjamin M. and Woodford, Michael (eds.), Handbook of Monetary Economics, Vol. 3, Chap. 14, pp. 723828. Amsterdam: Elsevier.Google Scholar
Woodford, Michael (2012) Methods of Policy Accommodation at the Interest-Rate Lower Bound. Presented at the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City Economic Policy Symposium, Jackson Hole, WY.Google Scholar
Woodford, Michael (2013) Inflation targeting: Fix it, don't scrap it. In Reichlin, Lucrezia and Baldwin, Richard (eds.), Is Inflation Targeting Dead? Central Banking after the Crisis, pp. 7489. London: CEPR, VoxEU.org.Google Scholar