Robustly Optimal Monetary Policy with Near Rational Expectations

48 Pages Posted: 5 Feb 2006 Last revised: 2 Jan 2023

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Michael Woodford

Columbia University, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Department of Economics

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Date Written: December 2005

Abstract

The paper considers optimal monetary stabilization policy in a forward-looking model, when the central bank recognizes that private-sector expectations need not be precisely model-consistent, and wishes to choose a policy that will be as good as possible in the case of any beliefs that are close enough to model-consistency. The proposed method offers a way of avoiding the assumption that the central bank can count on private-sector expectations coinciding precisely with whatever it plans to do, while at the same time also avoiding the equally unpalatable assumption that the central bank can precisely model private-sector learning and optimize in reliance upon a precise law of motion for expectations.The main qualitative conclusions of the rational-expectations analysis of optimal policy carry over to the weaker assumption of near-rational expectations. It is found that commitment continues to be important for optimal policy, that the optimal long-run inflation target is unaffected by the degree of potential distortion of beliefs, and that optimal policy is even more history-dependent than if rational expectations are assumed.

Suggested Citation

Woodford, Michael, Robustly Optimal Monetary Policy with Near Rational Expectations (December 2005). NBER Working Paper No. w11896, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=872732

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