Marzo, Massimiliano ;
Strid, Ingvar ;
Zagaglia, Paolo
(2006)
Optimal Opportunistic Monetary Policy in A New-Keynesian Model.
Bologna:
Dipartimento di Scienze economiche DSE,
p. 33.
DOI
10.6092/unibo/amsacta/4713.
In: Quaderni - Working Paper DSE
(573).
ISSN 2282-6483.
Full text available as:
Abstract
The present paper compares the performance in terms of second order accurate
welfare of opportunistic non-linear Taylor rules and with respect to traditional linear
Taylor rules. The macroeconomic model representing the benchmark for the analysis includes
capital accumulation (with quadratic costs of adjustment), price rigidities (quadratic
approach), along the standard New-Keynesian approach. The model is solved up to second
order approximation and welfare is evaluated according to several criteria (conditional to the non-stochastic steady state, unconditional, and according to a linear ad hoc function). The results show that: (i) the opportunistic rule is a Pareto improvement with respect to other monetary policy rules traditionally considered in the literature; (ii) the computation of welfare costs reveals that the burden of adjustment is almost entirely on labor supply fluctuations;(iii) increasing the degree of price rigidities and the degree of competition in the final goods markets, makes the opportunistic rule even more preferable with respect to the alternatives.
Business Cycle statistics for the model with opportunistic rule show a large volatility in labor supply, with a limited volatility for the nominal interest rate.
Abstract
The present paper compares the performance in terms of second order accurate
welfare of opportunistic non-linear Taylor rules and with respect to traditional linear
Taylor rules. The macroeconomic model representing the benchmark for the analysis includes
capital accumulation (with quadratic costs of adjustment), price rigidities (quadratic
approach), along the standard New-Keynesian approach. The model is solved up to second
order approximation and welfare is evaluated according to several criteria (conditional to the non-stochastic steady state, unconditional, and according to a linear ad hoc function). The results show that: (i) the opportunistic rule is a Pareto improvement with respect to other monetary policy rules traditionally considered in the literature; (ii) the computation of welfare costs reveals that the burden of adjustment is almost entirely on labor supply fluctuations;(iii) increasing the degree of price rigidities and the degree of competition in the final goods markets, makes the opportunistic rule even more preferable with respect to the alternatives.
Business Cycle statistics for the model with opportunistic rule show a large volatility in labor supply, with a limited volatility for the nominal interest rate.
Document type
Monograph
(Working Paper)
Creators
Keywords
disinflation, monetary policy rules,nonlinear rules, Taylor rules
Subjects
ISSN
2282-6483
DOI
Deposit date
29 Feb 2016 11:13
Last modified
29 Feb 2016 11:13
URI
Other metadata
Document type
Monograph
(Working Paper)
Creators
Keywords
disinflation, monetary policy rules,nonlinear rules, Taylor rules
Subjects
ISSN
2282-6483
DOI
Deposit date
29 Feb 2016 11:13
Last modified
29 Feb 2016 11:13
URI
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