Showing posts with label Yellen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Yellen. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 27, 2018

Understanding Hawks and Doves

Understanding Hawks and Doves

How do hawks and doves on the Federal Open Market Committee differ in their views of appropriate monetary policy and their related projections for inflation and unemployment? We find that hawks project higher inflation despite building tighter policy paths into their projections. Doves project lower inflation despite having easier policy paths, although their projections are somewhat closer to the median. In addition, hawks see a steeper inflation-unemployment tradeoff than doves up to a one-year horizon.

Source: Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City

Thursday, January 4, 2018

The Evolution of U.S. Monetary Policy

A very readable overview of monetary policy in the United States by Robert L. Hetzel, a staff economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond.

Abstract: 

Since the establishment of the Federal Reserve System in 1913, policymakers have always pursued the goal of economic stability. At the same time, their understanding of the world and of the role of monetary policy has changed dramatically. This evolution of views provides a laboratory for understanding what kinds of monetary policy stabilize the economy and what kinds destabilize it.

Available here.


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