Monetary Institutions, Partisanship, and Inflation Targeting

Posted: 11 Jun 2008

See all articles by Bumba Mukherjee

Bumba Mukherjee

University of Notre Dame - Kellogg Institute for International Studies; Princeton University

David Andrew Singer

Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) - Department of Political Science

Abstract

Since 1989, twenty-five countries have adopted a monetary policy rule known as inflation targeting (IT), in which the central bank commits to using monetary policy solely for the purpose of meeting a publicly announced numerical inflation target within a particular time frame. In contrast, many other countries continue to conduct monetary policy without a transparent nominal anchor. The emergence of IT has been almost completely ignored by political scientists, who instead have focused exclusively on central bank independence and fixed exchange rates as strategies for maintaining price stability. We construct a simple model that demonstrates that countries are more likely to adopt IT when there is a conformity of preferences for low-inflation monetary policy between the government and the central bank. More specifically, the combination of a right-leaning government and a central bank without bank regulatory authority is likely to be associated with the adoption of IT. Results from a spatial autoregressive probit model estimated on a time-series cross-sectional data set of seventy-eight countries between 1987 and 2003 provide strong statistical support for our argument. The model controls for international diffusion from neighboring countries by accounting for spatial dependence in the dependent variable, but our results indicate that domestic interests and institutions - rather than the influence of neighboring countries - drive the adoption of IT.

Keywords: Inflation targeting, central banks, partisanship, bank regulation, autoregressive probit model

JEL Classification: E52

Suggested Citation

Mukherjee, Bumba and Singer, David Andrew, Monetary Institutions, Partisanship, and Inflation Targeting. International Organization, Vol. 62, No. 2, 2008, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1143477

Bumba Mukherjee

University of Notre Dame - Kellogg Institute for International Studies ( email )

130 Hesburgh Center
Notre Dame, IN 46556
United States
(574) 631-7472 (Phone)

HOME PAGE: http:/politicalscience.nd.edu/faculty

Princeton University ( email )

22 Chambers Street
Princeton, NJ 08544-0708
United States

David Andrew Singer (Contact Author)

Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) - Department of Political Science ( email )

77 Massachusetts Ave.
E53-470
Cambridge, MA 02139-4301
United States

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Abstract Views
531
PlumX Metrics