Volume 13, Issue 1 February 2017

Tight Money and the Sustainability of Public Debt

Abstract

In the celebrated paper "Some Unpleasant Monetarist Arithmetic," Sargent and Wallace (1981) show that tight monetary policy is not feasible unless it is supported by appropriate fiscal adjustment. In this paper, we explore a simple forwardlooking monetary model to show that an anticipated decrease in the growth rate of base money is not necessarily characterized by "unpleasant arithmetic." This is due to a possible transitory gain in seigniorage supported by a temporal decrease in the real interest rate, which keeps public debt on a sustainable path. An important implication is that an increase in the present value of future budget deficits does not necessarily have inflationary consequences.

Authors

  • Sergey Pekarski

JEL codes

  • E41
  • E52
  • E61
  • E63

Other papers in this issue

Michael Ehrmann and Damjan Pfajfar and Emiliano Santoro

Jef Boeckx and Maarten Dossche and Gert Peersman

Sirio Aramonte and Samuel Rosen and John W. Schindler

Sylvester Eijffinger and Ronald Mahieu and Louis Raes