Paper published in Economic Theory (Vol. 62, June 2016)
This paper examines quantity-targeting monetary policy in a twoperiod economy with fiat money, durable goods and default. Short positions in long-term loans are backed by collateral, the value of which depends on monetary policy. The Quantity Theory of Money turns out to be compatible with long-run non-neutrality of money. Moreover, we show that, provided it does not lead to a liquidity trap, an expansionary monetary policy reduces markets’ inefficiency. Finally, we prove that, as the quantity of Bank money injected in the economy grows to infinity, only three scenarios can asymptotically emerge:
1) either the economy enters a liquidity trap in the first period, because the monetary expansion is not credible; 2) or a credible expansionary monetary policy accompanies the orderly functioning of markets at the cost of fueling inflation on the commodity market; 3) else, the money injected by the Central Bank increases the leverage of indebted investors, fueling a financial bubble whose bursting may lead to debt-deflation in the next period. This dilemma of monetary policy highlights the default channel affecting trades and production, and provides a rigorous foundation to Fisher’s debt deflation theory as being distinct from Keynes’ liquidity trap. It sheds some light on the pros and contras of non-conventional monetary policies.
> Download here the initial working paper (Nov. 2012)
> Buy online the published article (June 2016)
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