scholarly journals Inflation persistence, inflation targets and monetary policy rules

2004 ◽  
Author(s):  
Víctor López Pérez
2005 ◽  
Vol 54 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ralf Fendel ◽  
Michael Frenkel

AbstractThe paper discusses the conduct of monetary policy of the ECB. We estimate monetary policy rules for the sample period 1999 through 2004. The results are in line with the change of the strategy the ECB recently announced. The implied inflation targets that are extracted from the regressions are close to the target range that the ECB has formulated. We also find that the interest rate setting behavior of the ECB is affected by M3 growth as a leading indicator for future inflation and real activity but not as an independent argument of the monetary policy rule. Furthermore, we validate the ECB’s announcement of no explicit exchange rate target beside the fact that the exchange rate serves as an indicator for future inflation.


2021 ◽  
Vol 43 (1) ◽  
pp. 55-82
Author(s):  
George S. Tavlas

There has long been a presumption that the price-level stabilization frameworks of Irving Fisher and Chicagoans Henry Simons and Lloyd Mints were essentially equivalent. I show that there were subtle, but important, differences in the rationales underlying the policies of Fisher and the Chicagoans. Fisher’s framework involved substantial discretion in the setting of the policy instruments; for the Chicagoans the objective of a policy rule was to tie the hands of the authorities in order to reduce discretion and, thus, monetary policy uncertainty. In contrast to Fisher, the Chicagoans provided assessments of the workings of alternative rules, assessed various criteria—including simplicity and reduction of political pressures—in the specification of rules, and concluded that rules would provide superior performance compared with discretion. Each of these characteristics provided a direct link to the rules-based framework of Milton Friedman. Like Friedman’s framework, Simons’s preferred rule targeted a policy instrument.


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