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CENTRAL BANK LEARNING, TERMS OF TRADE SHOCKS & CURRENCY RISKS: SHOULD ONLY INFLATION MATTER FOR MONETARY POLICY?

Guay Lim and Paul McNelis ()

No 831, Department of Economics - Working Papers Series from The University of Melbourne

Abstract: This paper examines the role of interest rate policy in a small open economy subject to terms of trade shocks, and time-varying currency risks. The private sector makes optimal decisions in an intertemporal non-linear setting with rational, forward-looking expectations. In contrast, the monetary authority practices "least-squares learning" about the evolution of inflation, output growth, and exchange rate depreciation in alternative policy scenarios. Interest rates are set by linear quadratic optimization, with the objectives for inflation, output growth, or depreciation depending on current conditions. The simulation results show that the prefered stance is one which targets inflation only. Including other targets such as growth and exchange rate changes significantly increases output variability, and unambiguously decreases welfare.

Keywords: Currency risks; learning; parameterized expectations; policy targets (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 28 pages
Date: 2002
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Related works:
Working Paper: Central Bank Learning, Terms of Trade Shocks & Currency Risks: Should Only Inflation Matter for Monetary Policy? (2002)
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