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The Simple Analytics of Monetary Policy: A Post-Crisis Approach

TLDR
In this paper, the authors propose a simple model that bridges this gap by distinguishing the interest rate that the central bank sets from the one that matters for the spending decisions of households and firms.
Abstract
The standard workhorse models of monetary policy now commonly in use, both for teaching macro- economics to students and for supporting policymaking within many central banks, are incapable of incorporating the most widely accepted accounts of how the 2007–9 financial crisis occurred and are incapable too of analyzing the actions that monetary policymakers took in response to it. They also offer no point of entry for the frontier research that many economists have subsequently undertaken, especially research revolving around frictions in financial intermediation. The author suggests a simple model that bridges this gap by distinguishing the interest rate that the central bank sets from the interest rate that matters for the spending decisions of households and firms. One version of this model adds to the canonical “new Keynesian†model a fourth equation representing the spread between these two interest rates. An alternate version replaces this reduced-form expression for the spread with explicit supply and demand equations for privately issued credit obligations. The discussion illustrates the use of both versions of the model for analyzing the kind of breakdown in financial intermediation that triggered the 2007–9 crisis as well as “unconventional†central bank actions like large-scale asset purchases and forward guidance on the policy interest rate.

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Monetary Policy Operations and the Financial System

TL;DR: The role of Collateral availability for monetary policy and the role of the Central Bank as Lender of Last Resort (LOLR) in crisis times is discussed in this article.
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Has the Financial Crisis Permanently Changed the Practice of Monetary Policy? Has It Changed the Theory of Monetary Policy?

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that one of the two forms of hitherto unconventional monetary policy that many central banks have implemented in response to the 2007 financial crisis -large-scale asset purchases, or to put the matter more generically, use of the central bank's balance sheet as a distinct tool of monetary policy -is likely to become part of the standard toolkit for monetary policymaking in normal times as well.
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The Impact of Unconventional Monetary Policy Measures by the Systemic Four on Global Liquidity and Monetary Conditions

TL;DR: This article examined the impact of unconventional monetary policy measures (UMPMs) implemented since 2008 in the United States, the United Kingdom, Euro area and Japan on global monetary and liquidity conditions.
References
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TL;DR: In this article, a review of the recent literature on monetary policy rules is presented, and the authors exposit the monetary policy design problem within a simple baseline theoretical framework and consider the implications of adding various real word complications.
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Agency Costs, Net Worth, And Business Fluctuations

TL;DR: The authors constructs a simple neoclassical model of intrinsic business cycle dynamics in which borrowers' balance sheet positions play an important role and shows that the agency costs of undertaking physical investments are inversely related to the entrepreneur's/borrower's net worth.
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Financial Intermediation, Loanable Funds, and The Real Sector

TL;DR: In this article, an incentive model of financial intermediation in which firms as well as intermediaries are capital constrained is studied, and how the distribution of wealth across firms, intermediaries, and uninformed investors affects investment, interest rates, and the intensity of monitoring.
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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.
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