Jeffrey Campbell
(University of Notre Dame)
will give a presentation on
Effective Time-Consistent Quantitative Easing under Ricardian Equivalence
Abstract: This paper considers monetary and fiscal policy when tangible assets can be created and stored after shocks that increase desired savings. The model's flexible-price allocation uses saving to smooth consumption. With nominal rigidities, monetary policy that eliminates liquidity traps leaves the economy vulnerable to confidence recessions with low consumption and investment. Real Quantitative Easing, a fiscal policy that purchases either obligations collateralized by reproducible tangible assets or the assets themselves, eliminates both liquidity traps and confidence recessions by putting a floor under future consumption. This requires no commitment to a time-inconsistent plan. In a small open economy, the monetary authority can implement Real Quantitative Easing with a sterilized currency-market intervention that accumulates foreign reserves. This can improve outcomes even if it leaves nominal exchange rates unchanged.