User:Nick Gardner /Sandbox
Second, there are important questions to be answered about the design of monetary policy. At least one factor that fuelled the housing bubble – in the U.K., the U.S. and elsewhere – was the very low level of interest rates. There seemed to be a consensus among economists on both sides of the Atlantic that asset markets, including the housing market, could be left to their own devices and that interest rate policy should be directed solely at controlling price inflation, not asset price inflation. Additionally, it was understood that monetary policy could be used as the single main instrument of government macroeconomic policy. Inflation targeting, however, needs to be supplemented by some form of regulation specifically aimed at calming asset markets when they become overheated.
Shigenori Shiratsuka
- ↑ Hiroshi Ugai: Effects of the Quantitative Easing Policy: A Survey of Empirical Analyses, Bank of Japan, July 2006
- ↑ Monetary Policy Framework, Bank of England, 2009
- ↑ Arzu Çetinkaya and' Devrim Yavuz'Calculation of the Output-Inflation Sacrifice Ratio: The Case of Turkey, The Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey, October 2002
- ↑ Laurence Boone and Benoit Mojon: Sacrifice Ratio in Europe: A Comparison of France, Germany, Italy and the U.K., (Available at SSRN) 1999
- ↑ Laurence Ball: What Determines the Sacrifice Ratio?, National Bureau of Economic Research, 1994
- ↑ Robert E. Keleher: Transparency and Federal Reserve Monetary Policy , United States Congress Joint Economic Committee, November 1997
- ↑ Federal Open Market Committee: Frequently Asked Questions, Federal Reserve Board, 2009