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by Stephen K. McNees
November/December 1992
This study suggests that U.S. monetary policy has
been influenced by forecasts of and past experience
with three broad factors: inflation, economic activity,
and the monetary aggregates. The influence of each factor
has varied, however, within this common theme. In the
past 22 years at least two specific changes have occurred:
the October 1979 shift to greater emphasis on a narrow
measure of money and a shift in the early 1980s from
M1 targeting to M2.
The author models monetary policy econometrically,
testing the influence of numerous factors on monetary
policy and investigating whether a formal model can
capture variations in these factors and in the policy
instrument. The study also tests the influence of a
number of other factors that are often thought to have
an impact on monetary policy, such as measufes Of fiscal
policy, exchange rates, and stock prices, as well as
the President and Fed Chairman and the political party
in power. The results indicate that monetary policy
does not react systematically to these other factors.
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