Monetary Policy and the Lost Decade : Lessons from Japan /

This paper investigates how monetary policy can help ward off a protracted deflationary slump when policy rates are near the zero bound by studying the experience of Japan during the "Lost Decade" which followed the asset-price bubble collapse in the early 1990s. Estimation results based o...

पूर्ण विवरण

ग्रंथसूची विवरण
मुख्य लेखक: Leigh, Daniel
स्वरूप: पत्रिका
भाषा:English
प्रकाशित: Washington, D.C. : International Monetary Fund, 2009.
श्रृंखला:IMF Working Papers; Working Paper ; No. 2009/232
ऑनलाइन पहुंच:Full text available on IMF
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245 1 0 |a Monetary Policy and the Lost Decade :   |b Lessons from Japan /  |c Daniel Leigh. 
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300 |a 1 online resource (33 pages) 
490 1 |a IMF Working Papers 
500 |a <strong>Off-Campus Access:</strong> No User ID or Password Required 
500 |a <strong>On-Campus Access:</strong> No User ID or Password Required 
506 |a Electronic access restricted to authorized BRAC University faculty, staff and students 
520 3 |a This paper investigates how monetary policy can help ward off a protracted deflationary slump when policy rates are near the zero bound by studying the experience of Japan during the "Lost Decade" which followed the asset-price bubble collapse in the early 1990s. Estimation results based on a structural model suggest that the Bank of Japan's interest-rate policy fits a conventional forward-looking reaction function with an inflation target of about 1 percent. The disappointing economic performance thus seems primarily due to a series of adverse economic shocks rather than an extraordinary policy error. In addition, counterfactual policy simulations based on the estimated structural model suggest that simply raising the inflation target would not have yielded a lasting improvement in performance. However, a price-targeting rule or a policy rule that combined a higher inflation target with a more aggressive response to output would have achieved superior stabilization results. 
538 |a Mode of access: Internet 
830 0 |a IMF Working Papers; Working Paper ;  |v No. 2009/232 
856 4 0 |z Full text available on IMF  |u http://elibrary.imf.org/view/journals/001/2009/232/001.2009.issue-232-en.xml  |z IMF e-Library