The liquidity trap, the real balance effect, and the Friedman rule
Peter Ireland
No 05-3, Working Papers from Federal Reserve Bank of Boston
Abstract:
This paper studies the behavior of the economy and the efficacy of monetary policy under zero nominal interest rates, using a model with population growth that nests, as a special case, a more conventional specification in which there is a single infinitely lived representative agent. The paper shows that with a growing population, monetary policy has distributional effects that give rise to a real balance effect, thereby eliminating the liquidity trap. These same distributional effects, however, can also work to make many agents much worse off under zero nominal interest rates than they are when the nominal interest rate is positive.
Keywords: Monetary policy; Price levels (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2005
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-mac and nep-mon
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Related works:
Journal Article: THE LIQUIDITY TRAP, THE REAL BALANCE EFFECT, AND THE FRIEDMAN RULE * (2005)
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