Reconsidering Central Bank Independence
Central bank independence has become one of the most widely accepted tenets of modern monetary policy. According to this view, the main role of independent central banks is to maintain price stability through the adjustment of short-term interest rates. Reconsidering Central Bank Independence argues that the global financial crisis has undermined confidence in this view as central banks increasingly have to address concerns other than price stability, such as financial stability, the need for output recovery and other broader policy goals. Large balance-sheet expansion by central banks followed the global financial crisis, which overlapped considerably with the financial policy of their respective governments. Exploring the consequences of this shift to a more diverse set of policy challenges, this book calls for a return to the consensus role for central banks and analyses what this might mean for their future independence.
- Offers an analysis as current as possible that also discusses recent developments on monetary policy implementation
- Combines different perspectives and school of thoughts (monetarist economics, rules vs discretion, public choice) on monetary policy
- Provides insight into how central banks have shifted their policy focus in recent years and gives the reader a chance to understand the implications
Product details
April 2024Adobe eBook Reader
9781108759618
0 pages
This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.
Table of Contents
- Part I. The Theoretical Foundations:
- 1. History of Central Banking
- 2. Focus on Inflation: The Rationale for Central Bank Independence since Ancient Days
- 3. The Political Economy of CBI
- Part II. Balance Sheet Operations in Different Times and CBI:
- 4. Central Banks and the Great Moderation
- 5. Monetary Policy Response to the Financial Crisis
- 6. Balance sheet policies and CBI
- Part III. The Political Economy of CBI in the Real Economy:
- 7. Fiscal Needs and Low Interest Rates Policy in an Olsonian Setting
- 8. Are Central Banks Too Independent? CBI and Democracy after the Crises
- 9. The Future of Central Bank Independence.