Deutsche Bundesbank, ed. (2001), The Monetary Transmission Process: Recent Developments and Lessons for Europe, Palgrave, New York, 60-102.
Abstract
This paper discusses how price stability can be defined and how
price stability can be maintained in practice. Some lessons for
the Eurosystem are also considered.
With regard to defining price stability, the choice between
price-level stability and low (including zero) inflation and the
decisions about the price index, the quantitative target and the
role of output stabilization are examined. With regard to
maintaining price stability, three main alternatives are
considered, namely a commitment to a simple instrument rule
(like a Taylor rule), forecast targeting (like
inflation-forecast targeting) and intermediate targeting (like
money-growth targeting). A simple instrument rule does not
provide a substitute for a systematic framework for monetary
policy decisions. Such a framework is instead provided by
forecast targeting. Forecast targeting can incorporate
judgemental adjustments, extra-model information, and different
indicators (including indicators of "risks to price
stability"). By extending mean forecast targeting
to distribution forecast targeting, nonlinearity,
nonadditive uncertainty and model uncertainty can be
incorporated. Eurosystem arguments in favor of its money-growth
indicator and against inflation-forecast targeting are
scrutinized and found unconvincing.
JEL Classification: E42, E52, E58
Keywords: Inflation targeting, intermediate targeting, monetary
targeting, Eurosystem.
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