Is Forward-Looking Inflation Targeting Destabilizing?
The Role of Policy's Response to Current Output under Endogenous Investment
Working Paper No. 07-W04
Kevin X.D. huang and Qinglai Meng
ABSTRACT [article]
In sticky price models with endogenous investment, virtually all
monetary policy rules that set a nominal interest rate in response
solely to future inflation induce real indeterminacy of
equilibrium. Applying the Samuelson-Farebrother conditions, we
obtain a necessary and sufficient condition for local real
determinacy, which reveals that increasing price stickiness or
letting policy respond also to current output may help ensure a
unique equilibrium. We find that the first channel by itself has a
quantitatively negligible effect and almost all strict
inflation-targeting rules lead to indeterminacy, whether with
higher price stickiness or overall stickiness by incorporating
firm-specific capital, sticky wages, or both. The effect of the
second avenue depends on labor supply elasticity and stickiness.
With high labor supply elasticity and price stickiness,
indeterminacy is much less likely to occur as policy also responds
to output. With estimated labor supply elasticity or empirically
reasonable price stickiness, policy's response to output helps
little in ensuring determinacy; even incorporating firm-specific
capital makes only a marginal improvement. Incorporating sticky
wages, on the other hand, greatly enhances the role of policy's
response to output in ensuring determinacy. With both sticky wages
and firm-specific capital incorporated, even a tiny response of
policy to current output can render equilibrium determinate for a
wide range of response of policy to future inflation.
Keywords and Phrases: Forward-looking inflation targeting, current output, sticky prices, sticky wages, firm-specific capital, endogenous investment, indeterminacy, Samuelson-Farebrother conditions
JEL Classification Numbers: E12, E31, E52