2005
DOI: 10.1111/j.1367-0271.2005.00152.x
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Designing Macroeconomic Frameworks: A Positive Analysis of Monetary and Fiscal Delegation*

Abstract: This paper proposes a simple model illustrating the potential benefits of approaching the design of a macroeconomic framework conducive to low inflation in both its monetary and fiscal dimensions rather than relying exclusively on the merits of central bank independence and other monetary commitment devices such as currency boards or dollarization. The reason is that monetary delegation alone merely 'relocates' the timeinconsistency problem stemming from the government's incentive to address structural output … Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(14 citation statements)
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References 46 publications
(85 reference statements)
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“…In Agell et al (1996), a discretionary equilibrium exists with both inflation and deficit bias, and the government would be better off committing to inflation at target and budget balance. Castellani and Debrun (2005) show that institutional change that reduces inflation bias through monetary policy might encourage inflation bias through fiscal policy with an associated deficit bias. 6 If fiscal rules exist to deal with deficit bias arising from this type of time inconsistency, a fiscal council can act as a guardian of such rules when policy makers have incentives to depart from them.…”
Section: Time Inconsistency and Inflation Biasmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…In Agell et al (1996), a discretionary equilibrium exists with both inflation and deficit bias, and the government would be better off committing to inflation at target and budget balance. Castellani and Debrun (2005) show that institutional change that reduces inflation bias through monetary policy might encourage inflation bias through fiscal policy with an associated deficit bias. 6 If fiscal rules exist to deal with deficit bias arising from this type of time inconsistency, a fiscal council can act as a guardian of such rules when policy makers have incentives to depart from them.…”
Section: Time Inconsistency and Inflation Biasmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Second, those two restrictions are at odds with predictions from standard theories of optimal monetary and fiscal institutions. Clearly, improving the incentives of monetary and fiscal policymakers-the precise objective of these institutional reforms-is bound to affect the outcome of their strategic interaction (Beetsma and Bovenberg, 1997a, b;1998;Debrun, 2000;Beetsma, Debrun, andKlaassen, 2001 Dixit andLambertini, 2003;and Castellani and Debrun, 2005). This literature points not only to cross-effects between fiscal (monetary) outcomes and monetary (fiscal) frameworks, but also to interactions between the two types of reforms.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While time inconsistency was a key argument behind the reform of monetary institutions (Rogoff, 1985), those very reforms may have aggravated the time‐inconsistency problem of fiscal policy because fiscal activism can potentially make up for the loss of monetary policy as an instrument to boost demand. Tying the latter to the mast (through rules or delegation) may thus encourage unwarranted, demand‐side fiscal expansions, essentially transforming the inflationary bias into a deficit bias (Agell et al , 1996; Castellani and Debrun, 2005).…”
Section: Discretion Institutions and Fiscal Disciplinementioning
confidence: 99%