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Financial markets and monetary policy
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Financial markets and monetary policy

Auteur : Jeffrey A Frankel
Éditeur : Cambridge, Mass. : MIT Press, ©1995.
Édition/format : Livre : AnglaisVoir toutes les éditions et les formats
Résumé :
The decade of the 1980s left many central bankers disillusioned with monetarism, so that the question of the optimal nominal anchor remains an open one. In this second collection of his writings on financial markets (the first, On Exchange Rates, covered international finance), Jeffrey Frankel turns his attention to domestic markets, with special attention to how national monetary policy is handled. The fifteen
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Détails

Type de document : Livre
Tous les auteurs / collaborateurs : Jeffrey A Frankel
ISBN : 0262061740 9780262061742
Numéro OCLC : 31331451
Description : xiii, 321 p. : ill. ; 24 cm.
Contenu : 1. Portfolio Crowding-Out, Empirically Estimated -- 2. A Comment on Debt Management -- 3. Portfolio Shares as "Beta Breakers" -- 4. Do Asset-Demand Functions Optimize over the Mean and Variance of Real Returns? A Six-Currency Test -- 5. The Constrained Asset Share Estimation (CASE) Method: Testing Mean-Variance Efficiency of the U.S. Stock Market -- 6. Expectations and Commodity Price Dynamics: The Overshooting Model -- 7. Commodity Prices, Money Surprises, and Fed Credibility -- 8. A Technique for Extracting a Measure of Expected Inflation from the Interest Rate Term Structure -- 9. An Indicator of Future Inflation Extracted from the Steepness of the Interest Rate Yield Curve along Its Entire Length -- 10. The Power of the Yield Curve to Predict Interest Rates (or Lack Thereof) -- 11. Ambiguous Policy Multipliers in Theory and in Empirical Models -- 12. The Implications of Conflicting Models for Coordination between Monetary and Fiscal Policymakers.
Responsabilité : Jeffrey A. Frankel.

Résumé :

The decade of the 1980s left many central bankers disillusioned with monetarism, so that the question of the optimal nominal anchor remains an open one. In this second collection of his writings on financial markets (the first, On Exchange Rates, covered international finance), Jeffrey Frankel turns his attention to domestic markets, with special attention to how national monetary policy is handled. The fifteen papers are divided into three sections, each introduced by the author. They cover, respectively, optimal portfolio diversification, indicators of expected inflation, and the determination of monetary policy in the face of uncertainty.

In the first section, Frankel explores what information the theory of optimal portfolio diversification can give the macroeconomist. In the second section, he considers what economic variables central bankers might use to gauge whether monetary policy is too tight or too loose. And in the final section, he looks at the range of uncertainty over policy effects and how that complicates coordination of macroeconomic policymaking. The book concludes with a sympathetic analysis of nominal GDP targeting.

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