Working
Paper 01-6
by Jeffrey C. Fuhrer
A number of recent papers have explored monetary policy
options, including in- flation targeting and inflation
forecast targeting (notably Svensson (1999a, 1999b,
2000)) and price level targeting (Wolman 2000, Batini
and Yates 1999, Blinder 1999). Most papers explore “optimal”
monetary policy in the context of a single model. However,
a number of conclusions made in the literature depend
strongly on the model specification used. In addition,
most papers have used the efficient policy frontier
concept to define optimal monetary policy. This paper
investigates the behavior of a variety of small structural
macro models under a variety of targeting rules. The
paper examines both minimum variance policy frontiers
and utility-maximizing policy. In the latter case, an
explicit model of consumer behavior with inflation-induced
tax distortions is explored. The paper examines the
improvement in utility from an optimal price-level target
and re-examines the improvement in utility in moving
from a positive to a zero target inflation rate. This
paper is a revised version of Working Paper 00-5,"Optimal
Monetary Policy in a Model with Habit Formation."
JEL classification codes: D12, E52, E43
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