Public
Policy Discussion Paper No. 04-2
by Jeff Fuhrer and
Geoff Tootell
The appropriate role for equity prices in monetary policy
deliberations has been hotly debated for some time. Recent
work suggests that equity prices have affected monetary policy
decisions above and beyond their indirect effect on the traditional
goal variables of the FOMC. However, the correlation between
stock price movements and these other goal variables has made
the identification of the equity price effect problematic.
Previous studies have used a forecast that embodies a different
information set from the one used by the FOMC, which could
bias the estimated coefficient on equity prices. The authors
show that, in fact, the methods used in the earlier literature
fail to adequately disentangle the observational equivalence
problem. The authors then show that after controlling for
the information that actually enters the FOMC’s decision-making
process, equity prices have had no independent effect on monetary
policy.
JEL classification codes: E52, E61
Keywords: monetary policy, policy rules, asset prices
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