This book is based on a conference celebrating the 50th
anniversary of the Deutsche Bundesbank. Since the 1950s, there have
been fundamental changes in the monetary order and financial
systems, in our understanding of the effects of monetary policy,
the best goals for central banks and the appropriate institutional
setting of central banks. Prominent monetary economists and central
bankers give their views on the most significant developments
during this period and the lessons we should draw from them.
The book contains four sections on central issues. The first
part discusses the main successes and failures of monetary policy
since the 1950s. The second part asks what economists have learned
about monetary policy over the past 50 years. It gives an overview
on experiences with various monetary strategies, focusing in
particular on monetary targeting and its problems, on inflation
targeting and why it was successful and the institutional framework
for monetary policy. The next section outlines the progress that
monetary economists have made since the Bundesbank was founded and
discusses the extent to which central banks can rely on
"scientific" principles. The final part describes the interaction
between monetary policy, fiscal policy and labour markets.
The book provides a comprehensive overview of the main
challenges faced by central bankers in the past and how and to what
extent monetary economics have been helpful in tackling them. It
outlines our current knowledge about the effects of monetary policy
and the appropriate institutional framework for central banks and
raises some open questions for the future. It will be of great
interest to monetary economists, central bankers and economic
historians.
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