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The euro area's framework for monetary policy implementation was
introduced in 1999. Eleven years on, this volume examines the
theoretical and historical underpinnings of the framework, how it
has fared in practice, and what challenges it is likely to face in
the future. The technology serving the implementation of monetary
policy has historically been the exclusive preserve of a narrow
group of specialists but the recent global financial crisis brought
the issue into the public eye, as the supply of base money exploded
while inflation risked turning into deflation. This book addresses
all the aspects of monetary policy implementation, with particular
emphasis on the European Central Bank and the euro, allowing a more
informed assessment of a neglected, but important, aspect of
economic life, and a better understanding of the exceptional
developments brought about by the financial crisis. Written by the
leading money market operators at the European Central Bank who
were involved in creating and implementing the framework, and who
are still managing monetary policy implementation at the Bank
today, this book provides a rare insider account of how the
framework has evolved, how it works in practice, and the challenges
of monetary policy implementation going forward.
Central banks came out of the Great Recession with increased power
and responsibilities. Indeed, central banks are often now seen as
'the only game in town', and a place to put innumerable problems
vastly exceeding their traditional remit. These new powers do not
fit well, however, with the independence of central banks, remote
from the democratic control of government. Central Banking in
Turbulent Times examines fundamental questions about the central
banking system, asking whether the model of an independent central
bank devoted to price stability is the final resting point of a
complex development that started centuries ago. It dissects the
hypothesis that the Great Recession has prompted a reassessment of
that model; a renewed emphasis on financial stability has emerged,
possibly vying for first rank in the hierarchy of objectives of
central banks. This raises the risk of dilemmas, since the Great
Recession brought into question implicit assumptions that the
pursuit of price stability would also lead to financial stability.
In addition, the border between monetary and fiscal policy was
blurred both in the US and in Europe. Central Banking in Turbulent
Times asks whether the model prevailing before the Great Recession
has been irrevocably altered. Are we entering, as Charles Goodhart
has hypothesized, into the 'fourth epoch' of central banking? Are
changes to central banks part of a move away from the global
liberal order that seemed to have prevailed at the turn of the
century? Central Banking in Turbulent Times seeks to answer these
questions as it examines how changes can allow for the maintenance
of price stability, while adapting to the long-term consequences of
the Great Recession.
The euro area's framework for monetary policy implementation was
introduced in 1999. Eleven years on, this volume examines the
theoretical and historical underpinnings of the framework, how it
has fared in practice, and what challenges it is likely to face in
the future. The technology serving the implementation of monetary
policy has historically been the exclusive preserve of a narrow
group of specialists but the recent global financial crisis brought
the issue into the public eye, as the supply of base money exploded
while inflation risked turning into deflation. This book addresses
all the aspects of monetary policy implementation, with particular
emphasis on the European Central Bank and the euro, allowing a more
informed assessment of a neglected, but important, aspect of
economic life, and a better understanding of the exceptional
developments brought about by the financial crisis. Written by the
leading money market operators at the European Central Bank who
were involved in creating and implementing the framework, and who
are still managing monetary policy implementation at the Bank
today, this book provides a rare insider account of how the
framework has evolved, how it works in practice, and the challenges
of monetary policy implementation going forward.
In the two decades prior to publication of this 1994 book,
international monetary relations had been characterised by latent
instability, and then by severe tensions. Yet the issue of
reforming the international monetary system does not appear on the
agenda of the policy makers of the major countries involved. The
International Monetary System tries to analyse this apparent
contradiction. It brings together contributions from some of the
most authoritative academic economists and monetary officials, and
examines each of the fundamental functions of the international
monetary system. There is broad support for improving present
monetary arrangements with the aim of ensuring more stable
conditions in monetary and financial markets and of promoting the
orderly adjustment of payments disequilibria. For political reasons
a fully-fledged reform exercise is unlikely, but very few experts
seem to like the status quo. This book provides the reader with a
comprehensive account of the institutional and policy changes
required to manage an increasingly integrated and interdependent
global monetary and financial system.
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