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Designing monetary and Fiscal policy rules in a New Keynesian model with rule-of-thumb consumers
- Publication Year :
- 2009
-
Abstract
- This paper develops a small New Keynesian model augmented with a steady state level of public debt and a share of rule-of-thumb consumers (ROTC henceforth) as in Gali' et al. (2004; 2007). The paper focuses on the consequences for the design of monetary and fiscal rules, of the bifurcation generated by the presence of ROTC on the demand side of the economy, in the absence of Ricardian equivalence. We find that, when fiscal policy follows a balanced budget rule, the amount of ROTC determines whether an active and/or a passive monetary policy in the sense of Leeper (1991) guarantees determinacy. When short run public debt assets are introduced, the amount of ROTC determines whether equilibrium determinacy requires a mix of active (passive) monetary policy and a passive (active) fiscal policy or a mix where policies are both active or passive. This set of equilibria has the potential to explain the empirical evidence on the U.S. postwar data on monetary and fiscal policy interactions
Details
- Database :
- OAIster
- Notes :
- Rossi, R, ROSSI, RAFFAELE
- Publication Type :
- Electronic Resource
- Accession number :
- edsoai.on1364603099
- Document Type :
- Electronic Resource