- A-Z
- Jena Economic Resea...
- Volume 12
- Money as an Inflati...
- Autor(in)
- Erschienen
- 28. August 2018
- Nummer des Discussion-Papers
-
2018-011
- Schlagwort(e)
-
endogenous money
inflation targeting
money demand
New Keynesian Macroeconomics
quantity equation
- Zusammenfsg.
-
Empirical tests of the quantity theory and particularly the neutrality of money are based on the idea that money growth “explains”, to some extent, inflation. Modern macroeconomic theory, however, considers inflation targeting central banks which use the interest rate as a policy tool, while money is seen as an endogenous outcome of financial intermediation, i.e. credit creation. A simple NKM model with fiat money demonstrates that money growth is tied to inflation, changes of output and interest rate changes. The latter are determined by inflation and output gap if we consider an inflation-targeting central bank. The quantity equation emerges from the macroeconomic transmission process but the economic causalities run from output and inflation to money creation. Hence, money growth does not explain inflation. Besides, the result does not require a sophisticated microfoundation of money demand but simply emerges from the transmission process.
- article pub. typess JER
- Research article
- article languages JER
- Englisch
- JEL-Classification for JER
- E44 - Financial Markets and the Macroeconomy ; E51 - Money Supply; Credit; Money Multipliers