“…5 The above examples highlight the steady interest of central bankers in population aging, a long way back. Relatedly, there are numerous empirical and theoretical papers which discuss the longer-term monetary (inflation rate, but not inflation volatility) and interest rate implications of aging, particularly, according to the secular stagnation literature slower economic growth is coupled with a fall in the natural rate of interest (examples include Summers (2014), Favero and Galasso (2015), Eggertsson, Mehrotra, and Robbins (2017), Ferrero, Gross, and Neri (2017) and Jones (2018)). 6 There are also many works which talk about the shorter-term behavior of the macroeconomy and monetary policy transmission (but not based on a multi-period general equilibrium framework with overlapping generations) which we will discuss as next, however, we are not aware of any papers on the interplay between aging and optimal monetary policies.…”