This is the first comprehensive presentation of how monetary
policymakers can use market prices to produce price stability. Drs.
Johnson and Keleher show why other, conventional methods have
failed and why market prices are superior guides for setting
monetary policy. Their book presents the rationale, history, and
philosophy underlying their approach; offers three forms of
empirical research evidence to support it; and then presents
special methods to use market prices as policy setting guides.
Important and challenging reading for monetary policymakers and
economists, bankers, financial analysts, and professional
investors, as well as their colleagues in the academic community
with similar interests.
Substantial changes involving revolutions in telecommunications
and information processing, financial deregulation, and the global
integration of financial markets have altered the environment in
which central banks operate. This altered environment has
undermined various conventional approaches to monetary policy. This
book presents an alternative market price approach to monetary
policy. The approach is easily adapted to the above-cited change:
it adopts a price stabilization policy goal and uses key market
prices from the commodity, foreign exchange, and bond markets as
guides to policy. Commodity prices, foreign exchange rates, and
bond yields represent proxies for the exchange rate between
domestic money and (1) commodities, (2) foreign monies, and (3)
future money (bonds), respectively. These market prices are
assessed in conjunction with one another to yield policy guidance
to the monetary authority. This book describes how this approach is
carried out in practice. Empirical evidence support the approach
from three perspectives. First, empirical support exists for each
of the individual market price indicators examined in isolation.
Second, market price indicators provided accurate signals for
monetary policymakers during the post-Bretton Wood era. Had this
market price approach been used by policymakers, the performance of
the macroeconomy during this period likely would have been
improved. Third, at least one historical episode demonstrates that
when the approach was employed, economic performance was
impressive, and price stability was, in fact, achieved.
General
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