Credibility and Time Inconsistency in a Stochastic World
David Currie and
Paul Levine ()
No 94, CEPR Discussion Papers from Centre for Economic Policy Research
Abstract:
This paper re-examines the issue of the credibility and sustainability of optimal policies derived from Pontryagin's Maximum Principle and generally regarded as time-inconsistent, in models with forward-looking rational expectations. Specifically, it considers the behaviour of such models in the presence of continuing stochastic noise. This is shown to convert the policy problem from a one-shot dynamic policy game to a continuing game, giving governments an incentive to invest in a reputation for not reneging on the full optimal rule. This incentive may, in certain circumstances, render the full optimal rule credible and therefore sustainable. It is demonstrated that a sufficiently low degree of discounting on the part of government, or a sufficiently high variance of shocks (measured relative to the initial displacement) ensures the sustainability of the full optimal rule. Using a simple dynamic open economy model, these conditions are shown to be plausible unless the discount rate is very high.
Keywords: Optimal Policy; Policy Credibility; Policy Sustainability; Time Consistency (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 1986-02
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