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Do We Really Know How Inflation Targeters Set Interest Rates?

By Marcela Meirelles Aurelio
July 2005 
RWP 05-02
Research Division 
Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City 

Abstract

      In inflation targeting (IT) regimes, the Monetary Authority announces an explicit objective, the target for inflation. However, other objectives that possibly conflict with the inflation goal are present, such as keeping output close to its potential level and the stability of financial markets. This multiplicity of objectives has spurred a debate on whether inflation targeting really provides a transparent framework for monetary policy. This question is addressed in this paper, focusing on the experience of six countries that adopted IT. The empirical investigation is based on a variety of data sets (including real time data and Central Bank's forecasts), as well as on alternative forward-looking reaction functions. The main finding is that, if transparency is interpreted as the short run predictability of policy actions, consistent with the announced inflation goal, then most of the IT regimes here examined are remarkably transparent. However, this is not necessarily true if a more broad interpretation of transparency is required. The data also reveals a certain degree of heterogeneity across countries and time, and therefore recommends caution with respect to general statements regarding the properties of IT regimes. 

Keywords: monetary policy transparency, inflation targeting, forward-looking interest rate rules, forecasting

JEL Codes: E52, E61, F41, F42, F47


Marcela Meirelles Aurelio is an economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City. This research has benefited from discussions with Sebastian Edwards, Rossen Valkanov, Greg Hess, Todd Clark, Sharon Kozicki, Michael Orlando, Pu Shen and participants of FRB of Kansas City Research Seminar and of the Spring Meeting of the Federal Reserve System Committee on International Economic Analysis. I would like to thank, in particular, Luis-Felipe Zanna for his comments on an earlier draft, as well as Thomas Schwartz and Eli Wiseman for research assistance. The views expressed herein are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City or the Federal Reserve System
Meirelles Aurelio email:  marcela.meirelles.aurelio@kc.frb.org
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