Monetary Policy with a State-Dependent Inflation Target in a Behavioral Two-Country Monetary Union Model


Abstract:

In this paper we study the implementation of a state-dependent inflation target in a two-country monetary union model characterized by boundedly rational agents. In particular, we use the spread between the actual policy rate (which is constrained by the zero-lower-bound) and the Taylor rate (which can become negative) as a measure for the degree of ineffectiveness of conventional monetary policy as a stabilizing mechanism. The perception of macroeconomic risk by the agents is assumed to vary according to this measure by means of the Brock-Hommes switching mechanism. Our numerical simulations indicate a) that a state-dependent inflation target may lead to a better macroeconomic and inflation stabilization, and b) may even lead to an enlarged fiscal space, i.e. a lower debt-to-GDP ratio if the risk premium's reaction to a higher inflation target is not too large.

Año de publicación:

2021

Keywords:

  • Monetary policy
  • Monetary unions
  • Zero Lower Bound
  • Behavioral Macroeconomics
  • Inflation Targets

Fuente:

scopusscopus

Tipo de documento:

Article

Estado:

Acceso restringido

Áreas de conocimiento:

  • Macroeconomía
  • Crecimiento económico

Áreas temáticas:

  • Economía financiera
  • Economía internacional
  • Macroeconomía y temas afines