Central bank communication, decision making, and governance : issues, challenges, and case studies
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TextPublication details: Cambridge : MIT Press, 2013. Description: vi ,318 p. ill.; 23 cmISBN: 978-1-118-09575-1 (pbk.)Subject(s): | DDC classification: 332.110684 SIK Summary: Experts analyze the recent emphasis on central communication as an additional policy and accountability device. In recent years central bankers have placed new emphasis on communication with financial markets and the general public. They have done this not only through the traditional channel of monetary policy pronouncements but also by increasing the quantity of information they make public. Yet as central banks strive to provide more and clearer information about the outlook for the economy, they must balance their capacity to steer economic expectations with their natural caution about committing to future monetary policy paths. This volume offers a variety of perspectives on the economic implications of increased central bank communication. Contributors offer theoretical analyses of the effect of central bank communication on the general macroeconomic environment; consider a variety of novel empirical approaches to the issue; and analyze communication, decision making, and governance practices of the Greenspan-era U.S. Federal Reserve, the fledgling European Central Bank, and a variety of smaller central banks, including those of the Czech Republic, Sweden, England, and New Zealand. ContributorsHelge Berger, Michelle Bligh, Marianna Blix-Grimaldi, Ales Bulir, Robert Chirinko, Martin Cihak, Christopher Curran, Paul De Grauwe, Jakob de Haan, Michael Ehrmann, Marcel Fratzscher, Petra Geraats, Gregory Hess, Roman Horvath, David-Jan Jansen, Ozer Karagedikli, Michael Lamla, David Mayes, Alberto Montagnoli, Pierre L. Siklos, Katerina Smidkova, Jan-Egbert Sturm, Jan Zapal.
| Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book
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Teaching & Research Resource Centre - 6 - Business Case Studies Center | 332.110684 SIK (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | M-70948 |
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| 332.10973 Financial Markets and Institutions | 332.10973 MIS Financial markets and institutions | 332.10973 MIS Financial markets and institutions | 332.110684 SIK Central bank communication, decision making, and governance : issues, challenges, and case studies | 332.12 Commercial Banking | 332.12 GUP Commercial banking : the management of risk | 332.122405491 Annual Report 1983-84 |
Includes index.
Experts analyze the recent emphasis on central communication as an additional policy and accountability device. In recent years central bankers have placed new emphasis on communication with financial markets and the general public. They have done this not only through the traditional channel of monetary policy pronouncements but also by increasing the quantity of information they make public. Yet as central banks strive to provide more and clearer information about the outlook for the economy, they must balance their capacity to steer economic expectations with their natural caution about committing to future monetary policy paths. This volume offers a variety of perspectives on the economic implications of increased central bank communication. Contributors offer theoretical analyses of the effect of central bank communication on the general macroeconomic environment; consider a variety of novel empirical approaches to the issue; and analyze communication, decision making, and governance practices of the Greenspan-era U.S. Federal Reserve, the fledgling European Central Bank, and a variety of smaller central banks, including those of the Czech Republic, Sweden, England, and New Zealand. ContributorsHelge Berger, Michelle Bligh, Marianna Blix-Grimaldi, Ales Bulir, Robert Chirinko, Martin Cihak, Christopher Curran, Paul De Grauwe, Jakob de Haan, Michael Ehrmann, Marcel Fratzscher, Petra Geraats, Gregory Hess, Roman Horvath, David-Jan Jansen, Ozer Karagedikli, Michael Lamla, David Mayes, Alberto Montagnoli, Pierre L. Siklos, Katerina Smidkova, Jan-Egbert Sturm, Jan Zapal.

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