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E-raamat: Committee Decisions on Monetary Policy: Evidence from Historical Records of the Federal Open Market Committee

  • Formaat: 336 pages
  • Sari: The MIT Press
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Dec-2004
  • Kirjastus: MIT Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780262270168
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  • Formaat: 336 pages
  • Sari: The MIT Press
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Dec-2004
  • Kirjastus: MIT Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780262270168
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An examination of how the policy preferences of individual members of the Federal Open Market Committee are translated into monetary policy decisions.

In many countries, monetary policy decisions are made by committees. In the United States, these decisions are made by the Federal Reserve's Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), which consists of the seven members of the Board of Governors and the presidents of the twelve district banks. This book examines the process by which the preferences of the FOMC's individual members are translated into collective policy choices. This focus on the aggregation of individual preferences into group decisions is unique and provides an important perspective on the evolution of monetary policy choices.

To study decision making by the FOMC, the authors have used both formal voting records and detailed transcripts and summaries of deliberations contained in the committee's Memoranda of Discussion and FOMC Transcripts. The latter sources have been used to construct data sets describing individual committee members' policy preferences for the 1970-1978 and 1987-1996 periods when the FOMC was chaired by Arthur Burns and Alan Greenspan, respectively. These data are used to estimate monetary policy reaction functions for individual Committee members and to explore the role of majoritarian pressures, pressures for consensus, and the power of the chairman in collective decision making. The rich anecdotal evidence found in the Memoranda of Discussion and FOMC Transcripts inspires the narrative approach taken in two chapters, on the influence of political pressure on FOMC deliberations and on the relevance of the time inconsistency problem for the rise of inflation in the 1970s.
Tables and Figure xi
Preface xiii
1 Introduction
1(6)
1.1 Evidence from Historical Records: Individual-Level Data and Analysis
1(2)
1.2 Organization of the Book
3(4)
2 Institutional Background
7(10)
2.1 Organization of the Federal Reserve System
7(2)
2.2 Decision-Making Processes within the FOMC
9(3)
2.3 Monetary Policy Operating Procedures
12(4)
2.4 Conclusions
16(1)
3 Analytical Background
17(12)
3.1 Political Business Cycles
17(2)
3.2 The Federal Reserve as a Bureaucracy
19(2)
3.3 The Theory of the Time Inconsistency Problem
21(1)
3.4 Committee Reaction Function Studies
22(3)
3.5 Analysis of FOMC Voting Records
25(2)
3.6 Conclusions
27(2)
4 A Long History of FOMC Voting Behavior: Individual Reaction Functions and Political Influence on the Monetary Policy Decision Process
29(28)
4.1 A Model of FOMC Decision Making
31(4)
4.2 Data Considerations
35(2)
4.3 Empirical Results: Individual FOMC Members
37(8)
4.4 Political Influences on the Monetary Policy Decision Process
45(11)
4.5 Conclusions
56(1)
5 Data from the Memoranda of Discussion and FOMC Transcripts
57(14)
5.1 Data from the Textual Records of FOMC Meetings
58(1)
5.2 Coding FOMC Members' Monetary Policy Preferences: The Bums Years
59(5)
5.3 Coding FOMC Members' Monetary Policy Preferences: The Greenspan Years
64(5)
5.4 Conclusions
69(2)
6 Estimating Reaction Functions for Individual FOMC Members
71(26)
6.1 Individual Reaction Functions
72(2)
6.2 Individual Reaction Function Estimates: The Burns Era
74(5)
6.3 Burns Era Econometric Results in Historical Perspective
79(6)
6.4 Individual Reaction Function Estimates: The Greenspan Era
85(2)
6.5 Greenspan Era Econometric Results in Historical Perspective
87(7)
6.6 Conclusions
94(3)
7 Majority Rule, Consensus Building, and the Power of the Chairman: Arthur Burns and the FOMC
97(22)
7.1 The Power of the Chairman and the Allure of Consensus
99(2)
7.2 Constructing Preference Profiles for the FOMC
101(5)
7.3 FOMC Decision Making: Empirical Models
106(1)
7.4 FOMC Decision Making: Empirical Results
107(5)
7.5 FOMC Decision Making: Extensions
112(5)
7.6 Conclusions
117(2)
8 FOMC Decisions during the Greenspan Years
119(20)
8.1 Greenspan's Influence on the Committee
120(5)
8.2 The Committee's Influence on Greenspan
125(3)
8.3 Sources of Greenspan's Influence
128(9)
8.4 Conclusions
137(2)
9 Political Influences on Monetary Policy Decision Making: Evidence from the Memoranda and the Transcripts
139(22)
9.1 External Political Pressures on the FOMC
140(6)
9.2 Electoral Cycles
146(5)
9.3 The FOMC and the Provision of Information
151(8)
9.4 Conclusions
159(2)
10 Time Inconsistency and the Great Inflation: Evidence from the Memoranda and the Transcripts 161(22)
10.1 The Basic Time Inconsistency Model of Monetary Policy
164(1)
10.2 The Case for Time Inconsistency
165(6)
10.3 The Time Inconsistency Explanation of Inflation
171(3)
10.4 Alternative Explanations for the Great Inflation
174(3)
10.5 Time Inconsistency Theory and the Greenspan Years
177(3)
10.6 Conclusions
180(3)
11 Conclusions 183(10)
11.1 Summary of Contributions and Results
183(4)
11.2 Opportunities for Future Research
187(2)
11.3 Implications for Central Banking Institutions
189(4)
Appendix 1 Voting Data 193(4)
Appendix 2 Estimation of Individual Reaction Functions Using Dissent Voting Data 197(2)
Appendix 3 Estimation of Individual Reaction Functions Using Data from the Memoranda and the Transcripts 199(6)
Appendix 4 Bums Era Preference Profiles by Meeting 205(52)
Appendix 5 Greenspan Era Preference Profiles by Meeting 257(40)
References 297(8)
Index 305