This article focuses on the interaction, in a stylized economy with flexible prices, of monetary and fiscal policy when both are active - active in the sense that how the policy instrument is set depends on the state of the economy. Fiscal policy finances a given stream of government expenditures through distortionary labor taxes, and it operates under a strict balanced-budget rule. If monetary policy is passive, the economy may occasionally switch, because of self-fulfilling expectations, from the neighborhood of a "Laffer trap" equilibrium to the saddle-path leading to the highwelfare steady state. In the low-welfare stationary state, output, investment, and consumption are low while the tax rate is correspondingly high. However, active monetary policy may, by following a rule such that the nominal interest rate responds positively to the state of the economy, push the economy toward the high-welfare equilibrium and rule out expectation-driven business cycles. (JEL E32, E63, H31) © 2008, The Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis.
CITATION STYLE
Pintus, P. A. (2008). Laffer traps and monetary policy. Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Review, 90(3), 165–174. https://doi.org/10.20955/r.90.165-174
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