Volume 1, Issue 3 December 2005

How Should Monetary Policy Respond to Asset-Price Bubbles?

Abstract

We present a simple macroeconomic model that includes a role for an asset-price bubble. We then derive optimal monetary policy settings for two policymakers: a skeptic, for whom the best forecast of future asset prices is the current price; and an activist, whose policy recommendations take into account the complete stochastic implications of the bubble. We show that the activist's recommendations depend sensitively on the detailed stochastic properties of the bubble. In some circumstances the activist clearly recommends tighter policy than the skeptic, but in others the appropriate recommendation is to be looser. Our results highlight the stringent informational requirements inherent in an activist policy approach to handling asset-price bubbles.

Authors

  • David Gruen
  • Michael Plumb
  • Andrew Stone

JEL codes

  • E32
  • E52
  • E60

Other papers in this issue

Neville R. Francis and Michael T. Owyang and Athena T. Theodorou

Nigel F.B. Allington and Paul A. Kattuman and Florian A. Waldmann

Lars E.O. Svensson and Robert J. Tetlow

Neville R Francis and Michael T Owyang and Athena T Theodorou

Nigel F B Allington and Paul A Kattuman and Florian A Waldmann

Lars E O Svensson and Robert J Tetlow

David Gruen and Michael Plumb and Andrew Stone