Does Inflation Targeting Affect the Trade-off Between Output Gap and Inflation Variability?
- Authors: ARESTIS, P; CAPORALE, G; CIPOLLINI, A
- Publication year: 2002
- Type: Articolo in rivista (Articolo in rivista)
- Key words: stochastic volatility;policy frontier
- OA Link: http://hdl.handle.net/10447/101710
Abstract
We utilize a stochastic volatility model to analyse the possible effects of inflation targeting on the trade–off between output gap variability and inflation variability. We find that the adoption of inflation targets (in New Zealand, Australia, Canada, the UK, Sweden and Finland) might result in a more favourable monetary policy trade–off (except in Australia and Finland). This conclusion is reached by comparing, first, the economic performance of targeting countries in the 1980s and the 1990s; and second, the economic performance in the 1990s of targeting and non–targeting countries (the USA, Japan, Switzerland, Germany, France and the Netherlands). We focus on two possible explanations for the performance of the inflation–targeting regime: the relatively high degree of monetary policy transparency, and the presence of a flexible institutional framework.