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Journal ArticleDOI

A simple model for study of the determination of the price level and the interaction of monetary and fiscal policy

Christopher A. Sims
- 01 May 1994 - 
- Vol. 4, Iss: 3, pp 381-399
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TLDR
In this paper, a representative agent model with money holdings motivated by transactions costs, a fiscal authority that taxes and issues debt, no production, and a convenient functional form for agents' utility is presented.
Abstract
A representative-agent model with money holdings motivated by transactions costs, a fiscal authority that taxes and issues debt, no production, and a convenient functional form for agents' utility is presented. The model can be solved analytically, and illustrates the dependence of price determination on fiscal policy, the possibility of indeterminacy, even stochastic explosion, of the price level in the face of a monetary policy that holdsM fixed, and the possibility of a unique, stable price level in the face of a monetary policy that simply pegs the nominal interest rate at an arbitrary level. In a rational expectations, market-clearing equilibrium model with a costlessly-produced fiat money that is useful in transactions, the following things are true under broad assumptions. - A monetary policy that fixes the money stock may (depending on the transactions technology) be consistent with indeterminacy of the price level—indeed with stochastically fluctuating, explosive inflation. - A monetary policy that fixes the nominal interest rate, even if it holds the interest rate constant regardless of the observed rate of inflation or money growth rate, may deliver a uniquely determined price level. - The existence and uniqueness of the equilibrium price level cannot be determined from knowledge of monetary policy alone; fiscal policy plays an equally important role. Special case models with interest-bearing debt and no money are possible, just as are special cases with money and no interest-bearing debt. In each the price level may be uniquely determined. Determinacy of the price level under any policy depends on the public's beliefs about what the policy authority would do under conditions that are never observed in equilibrium. These points are not new. Eric Leeper [1991] has made most of them within a single coherent model. Woodford [1993], in a representative agent cash-in-advance model, has displayed the possibility of indeterminacy with a fixed quantity of money and the possibility of uniqueness with an interest-rate pegging policy. Aiyagari and Gertler [1985] use an overlapping generations model to make many of the points made in this paper, without discussing the possibility of stochastic sunspot equilibria. Sargent and Wallace [1981] and Obstfeld [1983] have also discussed related issues. This paper improves on Leeper by moving beyond his analysis of local linear approximations to the full model solution, as is essential if explosive sunspot equilibria are to be distinguished from explosive solutions to the Euler equations that can be ruled out as equilibria. It improves on the other cited work by pulling together into the context of one fairly transparent model discussion of phenomena previously discussed in isolation in very different models. We study a representative agent model in which there is no production or real savings, but transactions costs generate a demand for money. The government costlessly provides fiat money balances, imposes lump-sum taxes, and issues debt, but has no other role in the economy. We make restrictive assumptions about the form of the utility function and the form of a transactions cost term in the budget constraint. The model could be extended to include production, capital accumulation, non-neutral taxation, productive government expenditure, and a more general utility function without affecting the conclusions discussed in this paper. Indeed the model I informally matched to data in an earlier paper [1988] makes some such extensions. While such an extended model is more realistic, it is harder to solve. The version in my earlier paper [1988] was solved numerically and simulated. The bare-bones model of this paper allows an explicit analytic solution that may make its results easier to understand.

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Citations
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The Science of Monetary Policy: A New Keynesian Perspective

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Nominal Rigidities and the Dynamic Effects of a Shock to Monetary Policy

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The Science of Monetary Policy: A New Keynesian Perspective

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Posted Content

Nominal rigidities and the dynamic effects of a shock to monetary policy

TL;DR: The authors present a model embodying moderate amounts of nominal rigidities which accounts for the observed inertia in inflation and persistence in output, and the key features of their model are those that prevent a sharp rise in marginal costs after an expansionary shock to monetary policy.
Journal ArticleDOI

What are the effects of fiscal policy shocks

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Equilibria under ‘active’ and ‘passive’ monetary and fiscal policies

TL;DR: In this paper, monetary and fiscal policy interactions are studied in a stochastic maximizing model, where policy is either passive or active depending on its responsiveness to government debt shocks, and the existence and uniqueness of equilibria depend on two policy parameters.
Book ChapterDOI

Some Unpleasant Monetarist Arithmetic

TL;DR: The authors argued that even in an economy that satisfies monetarist assumptions, if monetary policy is interpreted as open market operations, then Friedman's list of the things that monetary policy cannot permanently control may have to be expanded to include inflation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Monetary policy and price level determinacy in a cash-in-advance economy*

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors considered the determinacy of the equilibrium price level in the cash-in-advance monetary economy of Lucas and Stokey (1983, 1987), in the case of deterministic "fundamentals".
ReportDOI

Money and Interest in a Cash-in-Advance Economy

Robert E. Lucas, +1 more
- 01 May 1987 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyze an aggregative general equilibrium model, in which the use of money is motivated by a cash-in-advance constraint, applied to purchases of a subset of consumption goods.