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Interest and Prices

Foundations of a Theory of Monetary Policy

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With the collapse of the Bretton Woods system, the connection between the world's currencies and real commodities has been abandoned. Since the 1980s, many central banks have also moved away from money-growth targets for monetary policy. This raises the question: how can fiat currencies be managed to instill confidence in national units of account? The text aims to establish theoretical foundations for a rule-based approach to monetary policy in an era of instant communication and efficient financial markets. Effective monetary policy necessitates that central banks articulate their actions clearly. The author reexamines monetary economics and demonstrates how interest-rate policy can achieve inflation targets without commodity backing or control over monetary aggregates. Additionally, it illustrates how modern macroeconomic tools can create an optimal inflation-targeting regime, balancing stabilization goals with price stability through explicit welfare analysis. This approach considers the "New Classical" critique of traditional policy evaluations, arguing that rule-based policymaking can remain flexible and relevant to stabilization objectives, while also highlighting the benefits of rule-based strategies over discretionary ones.

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Interest and Prices, Michael Woodford

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Released
2003
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Title
Interest and Prices
Subtitle
Foundations of a Theory of Monetary Policy
Language
English
Released
2003
Format
Hardcover
Pages
808
ISBN10
0691010498
ISBN13
9780691010496
Series
Rating
4 out of 5
Description
With the collapse of the Bretton Woods system, the connection between the world's currencies and real commodities has been abandoned. Since the 1980s, many central banks have also moved away from money-growth targets for monetary policy. This raises the question: how can fiat currencies be managed to instill confidence in national units of account? The text aims to establish theoretical foundations for a rule-based approach to monetary policy in an era of instant communication and efficient financial markets. Effective monetary policy necessitates that central banks articulate their actions clearly. The author reexamines monetary economics and demonstrates how interest-rate policy can achieve inflation targets without commodity backing or control over monetary aggregates. Additionally, it illustrates how modern macroeconomic tools can create an optimal inflation-targeting regime, balancing stabilization goals with price stability through explicit welfare analysis. This approach considers the "New Classical" critique of traditional policy evaluations, arguing that rule-based policymaking can remain flexible and relevant to stabilization objectives, while also highlighting the benefits of rule-based strategies over discretionary ones.