Interest-Rate Rules in a New Keynesian Framework with Investment
Abstract
The last decades have witnessed major progress in both monetary policy theory and practice, with broad academic consensus on the desirability of monetary policy rules and ongoing research on their exact specification. Typically, the analysis is carried out in a New Keynesian framework with nominal rigidities and constant capital stock. The latter represents a constraint that this study seeks to overcome by introducing a model with investment and capital adjustment costs. The work assesses different interest-rate rule specifications with respect to the target variables included, based on two criteria: determinacy of rational-expectations equilibrium and convergence to steady state after a shock. The study concludes that rules with both an inflation and an output gap target ensure a unique rational-expectations equilibrium and a less distressful adjustment of the economy after the occurrence of shocks.
Keywords
Framework; Inflation-targeting; Interest; Investment; Keynesian; Monetary policy; Pavlova; Rate; rational-expectations equilibrium; Rules; Taylor principle; withDOI
10.3726/978-3-653-01444-0ISBN
9783653014440OCN
817907315Publisher website
https://www.peterlang.com/Publication date and place
Bern, 2012-06-26Series
Schriften zur Wirtschaftstheorie und Wirtschaftspolitik, 44Classification
Politics and government
Economic theory and philosophy
Monetary economics