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Transparency and Credibility: Monetary Policy with Unobservable Goals

Jon Faust and Lars Svensson

International Economic Review, 2001, vol. 42, issue 2, 369-97

Abstract: We define and study transparency, credibility, and reputation in a model where the central bank's characteristics are unobservable to the private sector and inferred from the policy outcome. Increased transparency makes the bank's reputation and credibility more sensitive to its actions. This moderates the bank's policy and induces the bank to follow a policy closer to the socially optimal one. Full transparency of the central bank's intentions is generally socially beneficial but frequently worse for the bank. Somewhat paradoxically, direct observability of idiosyncratic central bank goals removes the moderating influence on the bank and leads to the worst equilibrium.

Date: 2001
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Related works:
Working Paper: Transparency and Credibility: Monetary Policy with Unobservable Goals (1998) Downloads
Working Paper: Transparency and credibility: monetary policy with unobservable goals (1998) Downloads
Working Paper: Transparency and Credibility: Monetary Policy with Unobservable Goals (1998)
Working Paper: Transparency and Credibility: Monetary Policy with Unobservable Goals (1998) Downloads
Working Paper: Transparency and Credibility: Monetary Policy with Unobservable Goals (1998) Downloads
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