The evolution of cash transactions: Some implications for monetary policy
成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Schreft, SL; Smith, BD
署名单位:
Federal Reserve System - USA; Federal Reserve Bank - Kansas City; University of Texas System; University of Texas Austin
刊物名称:
JOURNAL OF MONETARY ECONOMICS
ISSN/ISSBN:
0304-3932
DOI:
10.1016/S0304-3932(00)00021-0
发表日期:
2000
页码:
97-120
关键词:
Monetary policy
payments
cash
cashless society
摘要:
This paper considers the implications for monetary policy of a decreasing demand for outside money. It finds that even perpetual declines in the demand for base money pose no threat to the traditional methods employed for conducting monetary policy. The effects of such reductions in the demand for central bank liabilities, however, do depend on how monetary policy is conducted. Four monetary policy regimes are analyzed. With a policy of nominal-interest-rate targeting, a secular decline in the volume of cash transactions unambiguously leads to accelerating inflation. A policy of maintaining a fixed composition of government liabilities leads to accelerating (decelerating) inflation if agents have sufficiently high (low) levels of risk aversion. Inflation targeting produces falling nominal and real interest rates, while a policy of fixing the rate of money growth can easily lead to indeterminacy and endogenous oscillation in interest rates. It is argued that a policy of fixing the composition of government liabilities has several advantages if it is known that agents are not too risk averse and that the asymptotic demand for base money is small. If this information is not known, then interest-rate or inflation targeting have an advantage because their consequences are not sensitive to such environmental features. (C) 2000 Published by Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved. JEL classification: E31; E40; E5.
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