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Creator: Wallace, Neil Series: Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department) Number: 022 Abstract: This paper argues that versions of Samuelson/Cass-Yaari overlapping-generations consumption-loans models ought to be taken seriously as models of fiat money. The case is made by summarizing and interpreting what these models have to say about fiat money and by arguing that these properties are robust in the sense that they can be expected to hold in any model of fiat money.
Two of the properties establish the connection between, on the one hand, the existence of equilibria of which value is attached to a fixed stock of fiat money and, on the other hand, the optimality of such equilibria and the nonoptimality of nonfiat-money equilibria. Other properties describe aspects of the tenuousness of monetary equilibria in such models: The nonuniqueness of such equilibria in the sense that there always exists a nonfiat-money equilibrium and the dependence of the existence of the monetary equilibrium on the physical characteristics of other potential assets and on other institutional features like the tax-transfer scheme in effect. Rather than being defects of these models, it is argued that this tenuousness is helpful in interpreting various monetary systems and, in any case, is unavoidable; it will turn up in any good model of fiat money. Still other properties summarize what these models imply about the connection—or, better, lack of such—between fiat money and private borrowing and lending (financial intermediation) and what they imply about country-specific monies.
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Creator: Wallace, Neil Series: Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department) Number: 015 Abstract: No abstract available.
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Creator: Sargent, Thomas J. Series: Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department) Number: 040 Abstract: No abstract available.
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Creator: Bryant, John B. Series: Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department) Number: 043 Abstract: The formation and maintenance of the institutions of money and a futures market are analyzed in an overlapping generations model with a first period. With money and a futures market the economy converges to the allocation where costly transactions are foregone and marginal products and marginal utilities equated. However, neither institution may be formed, or money may be formed without a futures market. Moreover, stochastic output technologies raise the possibility of persistent recession and depression and of valuable government insurance of the futures market.
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Creator: Miller, Preston J. and Rolnick, Arthur J., 1944- Series: Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department) Number: 049 Abstract: The analyses of fiscal and monetary policies that the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) provides Congress tend to be biased, encouraging the use of activist stabilization policies. The CBO’s virtual neglect of economic uncertainties and its emphasis on very short time horizons make active policies appear much more attractive than its own model implies. Moreover, the CBO’s adoption of the macroeconometric approach fundamentally biases its analyses. Macroeconometric models do not remain invariant to changes in policy rules and are mute on the implications of alternative policies for efficiency and income distribution. The rational expectations equilibrium approach overcomes these difficulties and implies that less activist and less inflationary policies are desirable.
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Creator: Bryant, John B. Series: Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department) Number: 033 Abstract: No abstract available.
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Creator: Auerbach, Kay J. Series: Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department) Number: 010 Abstract: No abstract available.
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Creator: Bryant, John B. Series: Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department) Number: 046 Abstract: This paper presents a simple coherent general equilibrium example in which optimal provision of a public good implies counter-cyclical government expenditure.
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Creator: Bryant, John B. and Wallace, Neil Series: Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department) Number: 042 Abstract: This paper presents a welfare analysis of monetary policy rules that differ as regards the extent to which monetary policy accommodates an exogenous, stochastic deficit. Examples show that a nonaccommodating rule, one involving a higher ratio of bonds to currency the higher the deficit, is not necessarily better than rules that accommodate: either a rule involving a constant ratio of bonds to currency or one involving a lower ratio of bonds to currency the higher the deficit. Moreover, the nonaccommodating rule can imply more variation in the price level than the accommodating rules.
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Creator: Anderson, Paul A. Series: Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department) Number: 031 Abstract: No abstract available.