[DOWNLOAD] "Sound Monetary Policy, Credibility, And Economic Performance." by The Cato Journal " eBook PDF Kindle ePub Free
eBook details
- Title: Sound Monetary Policy, Credibility, And Economic Performance.
- Author : The Cato Journal
- Release Date : January 22, 2006
- Genre: Politics & Current Events,Books,
- Pages : * pages
- Size : 251 KB
Description
History is a constant reminder that sustainable healthy economic development requires sound and credible monetary policy. This is true of all nations, industrial and developing. Frequently, economic policy conferences focus on issues that elicit tirades about how everything is going wrong and radical reform is required. But recent trends in the conduct of global monetary policies have been highly favorable, helping to generate dramatic improvement in international inflation and economic performance. My focus in this article is on the key foundations for sound and credible monetary policy, the plusses and minuses of when simple principles are followed or violated, and suggestions for maintaining recent favorable trends. The bottom line is that well-understood principles--such as zero inflation and the importance of maintaining inflation-fighting credibility, transparency, central bank independence, reliance on market-based mechanisms to address undesired imbalances--apply to both developing and industrialized nations, and must be pursued independently of fiscal and regulatory policies. If such independence is impossible--primarily because of the lack of independence between the monetary authorities and the treasury--other institutional arrangements are required to ensure monetary soundness and credibility. A generation ago, around 1980, the circumstances and perceptions about central banks and monetary policy were far different than now. Inflation was very high and economic and financial market performance was poor in industrialized and developing nations alike. Central banks lacked credibility and inflationary expectations were high and volatile. Budget deficits were high and rising, and projections of soaring government debt-to-GDP ratios dominated the fiscal debate. The projected unsustainable rises in debt-to-GDP and the associated "unpleasant monetarist arithmetic" that pointed to eventual debt monetization suggested that monetary policy ultimately may be hostage to irresponsible fiscal policy. On top of the undesirable macroeconomic trends of the day, this perception undercut the implied independence and credibility of the monetary authorities. The potential for improvement seemed remote.