Search Images Maps Play YouTube News Gmail Drive More »
My library | Help | Advanced Book Search | Web History | Sign in

Books

Interest and Prices:

Foundations of a Theory of Monetary Policy
Front Cover
1 Review
Princeton University Press, Dec 12, 2011 - Business & Economics - 800 pages

With the collapse of the Bretton Woods system, any pretense of a connection of the world's currencies to any real commodity has been abandoned. Yet since the 1980s, most central banks have abandoned money-growth targets as practical guidelines for monetary policy as well. How then can pure "fiat" currencies be managed so as to create confidence in the stability of national units of account?

Interest and Prices seeks to provide theoretical foundations for a rule-based approach to monetary policy suitable for a world of instant communications and ever more efficient financial markets. In such a world, effective monetary policy requires that central banks construct a conscious and articulate account of what they are doing. Michael Woodford reexamines the foundations of monetary economics, and shows how interest-rate policy can be used to achieve an inflation target in the absence of either commodity backing or control of a monetary aggregate.

The book further shows how the tools of modern macroeconomic theory can be used to design an optimal inflation-targeting regime--one that balances stabilization goals with the pursuit of price stability in a way that is grounded in an explicit welfare analysis, and that takes account of the "New Classical" critique of traditional policy evaluation exercises. It thus argues that rule-based policymaking need not mean adherence to a rigid framework unrelated to stabilization objectives for the sake of credibility, while at the same time showing the advantages of rule-based over purely discretionary policymaking.

  

What people are saying - Write a review

Review: Interest and Prices: Foundations of a Theory of Monetary Policy

User Review  - Grant - Goodreads

Dense to say the least. Though I'm still wrapping my head around his arguments concerning sunspot equilibrium, I think his stance on imperfect competition is very accurate. Especially when one examines this through the prism of current market conditions. Read full review

Related books

Contents

Analytical Framework
59
Optimal Policy
379
APPENDIXES
625
REFERENCES
747
INDEX
765
Copyright

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2011)

Michael Woodford is the Harold H. Helm '20 Professor of Economics and Banking at Princeton University. He is the coeditor, with John B. Taylor, of "The Handbook of Macroeconomics".

Bibliographic information