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Asymmetries in Bank of England monetary policy

journal contribution
posted on 2006-05-30, 17:03 authored by Jamie Gascoigne, Paul Turner
This article estimates limited dependent variable models for Bank of England monetary policy using monthly data over the period June 1997–March 2003. During this period the Bank had operational independence to set the interest rate in order to meet the inflation target set by the government. The study finds evidence that the Bank has responded to current output growth rather than inflation, which is consistent with targeting future inflation when there is a lag in the response of inflation to the output gap. It also finds evidence of an asymmetry in the sense that the link between the interest rate and output growth is stronger when an increase in the interest rate is required than when circumstances dictate it should be cut. On the other hand there is considerably more inertia for interest rate cuts, in the sense that a cut in the rate in one month significantly increases the probability of a cut in the next month which is not the case for increases.

History

School

  • Business and Economics

Department

  • Economics

Pages

75639 bytes

Citation

GASCOIGNE, J. and TURNER, P., 2004. Asymmetries in Bank of England monetary policy. Applied Economics Letters, 11, pp.615-618.

Publisher

© Taylor and Francis

Publication date

2004

Notes

This is Restricted Access. This article was published in the journal, Applied Economic Letters [© Taylor and Francis] and is available at: http://www.journalsonline.tandf.co.uk/openurl.asp?genre=journal&issn=1350-4851.

ISSN

1350-4851

Language

  • en

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