Comparing the delegation of monetary and fiscal policy

The apparent success of independent central banks in conducting monetary policy has led many to argue that some form of policy delegation should also be applied to the macroeconomic aspects of fiscal policy. A number of countries have recently established Fiscal Councils, although their role is typ...

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Main Author: Wren-Lewis, S
Format: Working paper
Published: University of Oxford 2011
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author Wren-Lewis, S
author_facet Wren-Lewis, S
author_sort Wren-Lewis, S
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description The apparent success of independent central banks in conducting monetary policy has led many to argue that some form of policy delegation should also be applied to the macroeconomic aspects of fiscal policy. A number of countries have recently established Fiscal Councils, although their role is typically to give advice on paths for government debt and deficits rather than decide upon and implement policy. This paper examines how useful a comparison between monetary and fiscal policy can be in motivating and guiding Fiscal Councils. Simple analogies between inflation bias and deficit bias can be misleading, and the motives for delegating aspects of fiscal policy may be rather different from those generally associated with monetary policy. In addition, lack of knowledge about the desirable goals of long run debt policy, compared to a greater understanding of the objectives of monetary policy, may help explain key differences in the nature of delegation between the two. The paper ends by making some comparisons between the delegation of monetary and fiscal policy in the United Kingdom.
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spelling oxford-uuid:30c19ea4-1c1f-497e-8ea8-0209043220802022-03-26T13:03:34ZComparing the delegation of monetary and fiscal policyWorking paperhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_8042uuid:30c19ea4-1c1f-497e-8ea8-020904322080Bulk import via SwordSymplectic ElementsUniversity of Oxford2011Wren-Lewis, SThe apparent success of independent central banks in conducting monetary policy has led many to argue that some form of policy delegation should also be applied to the macroeconomic aspects of fiscal policy. A number of countries have recently established Fiscal Councils, although their role is typically to give advice on paths for government debt and deficits rather than decide upon and implement policy. This paper examines how useful a comparison between monetary and fiscal policy can be in motivating and guiding Fiscal Councils. Simple analogies between inflation bias and deficit bias can be misleading, and the motives for delegating aspects of fiscal policy may be rather different from those generally associated with monetary policy. In addition, lack of knowledge about the desirable goals of long run debt policy, compared to a greater understanding of the objectives of monetary policy, may help explain key differences in the nature of delegation between the two. The paper ends by making some comparisons between the delegation of monetary and fiscal policy in the United Kingdom.
spellingShingle Wren-Lewis, S
Comparing the delegation of monetary and fiscal policy
title Comparing the delegation of monetary and fiscal policy
title_full Comparing the delegation of monetary and fiscal policy
title_fullStr Comparing the delegation of monetary and fiscal policy
title_full_unstemmed Comparing the delegation of monetary and fiscal policy
title_short Comparing the delegation of monetary and fiscal policy
title_sort comparing the delegation of monetary and fiscal policy
work_keys_str_mv AT wrenlewiss comparingthedelegationofmonetaryandfiscalpolicy