The basic principles for optimal monetary policy implementation

Gaber, Stevan and Gaber, Vasilka (2013) The basic principles for optimal monetary policy implementation. Yearbook, Faculty of Economics, 5. pp. 47-63. ISSN 1857- 7628

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Abstract

The recent financial crisis, however, does require some major rethinking about the details of this basic framework for monetary policy strategy. We now recognize that the financial sector plays a very prominent role in the macro economy and makes it highly nonlinear at times ever, and in some ways, moreso. The theory of optimal monetary policy starts by specifying an objective function that represents economic welfare, that is, the well-being of households in the economy, and then maximizes this objective function subject to constraints that are provided by a model of the economy. Before the crisis, both the objective function and the model of the economy were based on the principles of the new neoclassical synthesis. The bad news is that we have just been through a once-in--hundred-year credit tsunami that has had a devastating impact on the economy that will last for years to come. The good news is that macro/monetary economists and central bankers do not have to go back to the drawing board and throw out all that they have learned over the last forty years. Much of the science of monetary policy remains intact. However, the essence of the optimal monetary policy and its stabilization policy is based on several basic principles that will be analised in more detail within this paper.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Social Sciences > Economics and business
Divisions: Faculty of Economics
Depositing User: Stevan Gaber
Date Deposited: 18 Sep 2014 13:50
Last Modified: 18 Sep 2014 13:50
URI: https://eprints.ugd.edu.mk/id/eprint/10957

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