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Alternative Monetary Targets, Instruments and Future Monetary Policy Frameworks

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  • Cristiano Boaventura Duarte

Abstract

This article expands on the debate of whether merely controlling inflation can be considered a good outcome in terms of monetary policy, discussing proposals for adopting alternative monetary targets (e.g., price level, nominal GDP), alternative instruments (e.g., monetary finance, central bank digital currencies), for enlarging central banks' mandates (e.g., incorporating employment, wages, inequality, environmental objectives) and for the design of future monetary policy frameworks.We argue that in the coming years, central banks should not simply maintain their pre-2008 standards by de-implementing unconventional monetary policies. Instead, they must take advantage of their past and recent experiences in order to improve, under an evolutionary perspective, future monetary policy and financial stability frameworks. Based on this, measures implemented since the 2008 crisis would have three possible treatments in new frameworks: i) be discarded, due to their predominantly adverse effects; ii) not be regularly implemented, but be used as backstop mechanisms if needed; iii) be incorporated as regular measures of monetary policy/financial stability frameworks. Accordingly, monetary and financial stability authorities will increasingly need to evolve and engage in a continuously adaptive and innovative process in order to face challenges posed by financial markets that are becoming more dynamic, innovative, complex, interconnected and globalised.

Suggested Citation

  • Cristiano Boaventura Duarte, 2020. "Alternative Monetary Targets, Instruments and Future Monetary Policy Frameworks," Review of Political Economy, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 31(4), pages 582-601, July.
  • Handle: RePEc:taf:revpoe:v:31:y:2020:i:4:p:582-601
    DOI: 10.1080/09538259.2020.1730606
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