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Author:Svensson, Lars E. O. 

Working Paper
Optimal monetary policy in an operational medium-sized DSGE model

We show how to construct optimal policy projections in Ramses, the Riksbank's open-economy medium-sized DSGE model for forecasting and policy analysis. Bayesian estimation of the parameters of the model indicates that they are relatively invariant to alternative policy assumptions and supports our view that the model parameters may be regarded as unaffected by the monetary policy specification. We discuss how monetary policy, and in particular the choice of output gap measure, affects the transmission of shocks. Finally, we use the model to assess the recent Great Recession in the world ...
International Finance Discussion Papers , Paper 1023

Journal Article
Optimal monetary policy under uncertainty: a Markov jump-linear-quadratic approach

This paper studies the design of optimal monetary policy under uncertainty using a Markov jump-linear-quadratic (MJLQ) approach. To approximate the uncertainty that policymakers face, the authors use different discrete modes in a Markov chain and take mode-dependent linear-quadratic approximations of the underlying model. This allows the authors to apply a powerful methodology with convenient solution algorithms that they have developed. They apply their methods to analyze the effects of uncertainty and potential gains from experimentation for two sources of uncertainty in the New Keynesian ...
Review , Volume 90 , Issue Jul , Pages 275-294

Conference Paper
Monetary policy issues for the Eurosystem

Proceedings

Working Paper
Transparency and credibility: monetary policy with unobservable goals

We define and study transparency, credibility, and reputation in a model where the central bank's characteristics are unobservable to the private sector and are inferred from the policy outcome. A low-credibility bank optimally conducts a more inflationary policy than a high-credibility bank, in the sense that it induces higher inflation, but a less expansionary policy in the sense that it induces lower inflation and employment than expected. Increased transparency makes the bank's reputation and credibility more sensitive to its actions. This has a moderating influence on the bank's policy. ...
International Finance Discussion Papers , Paper 605

Journal Article
Targeting versus instrument rules for monetary policy: what is wrong with McCallum and Nelson?

In their paper "Targeting versus Instrument Rules for Monetary Policy," McCallum and Nelson critique targeting rules for the analysis of monetary policy. Their arguments are rebutted here. First, McCallum and Nelson's preference to study the robustness of simple monetary policy rules is no reason at all to limit attention to simple instrument rules; simple targeting rules may have more desirable properties. Second, optimal targeting rules are a compact, robust, and structural description of goal-directed monetary policy, analogous to the compact, robust, and structural consumption Euler ...
Review , Volume 87 , Issue Sep , Pages 613-626

Working Paper
Expected and predicted realignments: the FF/DM exchange rate during the EMS

An empirical model of time-varying realignment risk in an exchange rate target zone is developed. Expected rates of devaluation are estimated as the difference between interest rate differentials and estimated expected rates of depreciation within the exchange rate band, using French Franc/Deutsche Mark data during the European Monetary System. The behavior of estimated expected rates of depreciation accord well with the theoretical model of Bertola-Svensson (1990). We are also able to predict actual realignments with some success.
International Finance Discussion Papers , Paper 395

Conference Paper
Indicator variables for optimal policy

The optimal weights on indicators in models with partial information about the state of the economy and forward-looking variables are derived and interpreted, both for equilibria under discretion and under commitment. An example of optimal monetary policy with a partially observable potential output and a forward-looking indicator is examined. The optimal response to the optimal estimate of potential output displays certainty-equivalence, whereas the optimal response to the imperfect observation of output depends on the noise in this observation.
Proceedings

Conference Paper
How should monetary policy be conducted in an era of price stability?

Proceedings - Economic Policy Symposium - Jackson Hole

Conference Paper
How should monetary policy respond to shocks while maintaining long-run price stability? Conceptual issues (commentary)

Proceedings - Economic Policy Symposium - Jackson Hole

Conference Paper
Monetary policy and real stabilization

Proceedings - Economic Policy Symposium - Jackson Hole

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