The ECB'S Money Pillar: An Assessment
- 1 January 2003
- journal article
- Published by International Monetary Fund (IMF) in IMF Working Papers
- Vol. 3 (82)
- https://doi.org/10.5089/9781451850468.001
Abstract
This paper discusses the case for a money pillar in the European Central Bank's (ECB) monetary policy strategy. Time-series evidence for industrial countries based on frequency-domain and unobserved-components analysis suggests that money can play a useful role in gauging and constraining long-run risks to price stability. Moreover, the specter of asset price bubbles and some of the area's institutional features, which may impart considerable persistence to area-wide inflation, caution against shifting to conventional inflation targeting. But the time series evidence also seems to point to a relatively loose connection between variations in nominal money growth and inflation in the short to medium run. As a consequence, effective communication of the ECB's monetary policy decisions from the point of view of the present money pillar is likely to remain a challenging task.Keywords
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This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Inflation Targeting RegimesIMF Working Papers, 2003
- Fear of FloatingThe Quarterly Journal of Economics, 2002
- Detrending, stylized facts and the business cycleJournal of Applied Econometrics, 1993