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Forecast-Based Monetary Policy

Jeffery D. Amato
Thomas Laubach
October 1999
RWP 99-10
Research Division
Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City


    Abstract

A number of central banks use (published or unpublished) forecasts of goal variables as key ingredients in their decisions for instrument settings. This use of forecasts is modelled as a particular form of objective with the minimization of which the central bank is charged. We use an estimated optimization-based model with staggered price and wage setting to analyze the welfare properties of such objectives and their implications for the form of instrument rules. We find that stabilizing expected price inflation at a horizon of two years around target dominates policies of stabilizing inflation at shorter or longer horizons. However, stabilizing all
fluctuations, not just forecastable ones, in both wage and price inflation leads to the closest approximation to the welfare-optimal rule.


Jeffery D. Amato is an economist at the Bank for International Settlements. Thomas Laubach is an economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City. The authors gratefully acknowledge many helpful discussions with Michael Woodford, as well as comments from Mark Gertler, Peter Ireland, Julio Rotemberg, Argia Sbordone, and John Taylor. All remaining errors are those of the authors. The views expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the Bank for International Settlements, the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, or the Federal Reserve System.
Amato e-mail: jeffery.amato@bis.org
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