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Journal Article

The Effects of Quasi-Random Monetary Experiments

Journal of Monetary Economics

Authors

  • Jordà
  • Ò.
  • Schularick
  • M.
  • Taylor
  • A.M.

Publication Date

DOI

10.3386/w23074

JEL Classification

E01 E30 E32 E44 E47 E51 F33 F42 F44

The trilemma of international finance explains why interest rates in countries that fix their exchange rates and allow unfettered cross-border capital flows are largely outside the monetary authority’s control. Using historical panel-data since 1870 and using the trilemma mechanism to construct an external instrument for exogenous monetary policy fluctuations, we show that monetary interventions have very different causal impacts, and hence implied inflation-output trade-offs, according to whether:(1) the economy is operating above or below potential; (2) inflation is low, thereby bringing nominal rates closer to the zero lower bound; and (3) there is a credit boom in mortgage markets. We use several adjustments to account for potential spillover effects including a novel control function approach. The results have important implications for monetary policy.

Kiel Institute Expert

  • Prof. Dr. Moritz Schularick
    President

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