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1 (October 4, 2007)

handle is hein.crs/crsuntaagho0001 and id is 1 raw text is: 
                                                                  Order  Code  RS21821
                                                               Updated  October 4, 2007





 Al CRS Report for Congress



   Evaluating the Current Stance of Monetary
                 Policy Using a Taylor Rule

                               Marc  Labonte
                       Specialist in Macroeconomics
                    Government and Finance Division

Summary


     Oversight of the Federal Reserve's (Fed's) monetary policy decisions rests with
 Congress. But oversight is encumbered by the absence of a straightforward relationship
 between interest rates and economic performance. The Fed's policy decisions are
 discretionary, meaning there is no objective, transparent yardstick for evaluating their
 decisions; this also hampers oversight. A simple rule of thumb guide to monetary policy
 decisions called a Taylor rule is an intuitive way to judge actual policy against some
 objective, albeit simplistic, ideal. Taylor rules are flexible enough to be adjusted to
 reflect a wide variety of policy goals. This report compares current policy to a number
 of Taylor rules, and finds that interest rates are currently lower than most rules would
 prescribe. This report will be updated as events warrant.

    The government  has two main tools for influencing overall economic conditions,
fiscal policy and monetary policy. Monetary policy can boost economic activity and
inflation by lowering short-term interest rates (the federal funds rate), or depress
economic  activity and inflation by raising interest rates. Changes in output and
employment  caused by monetary policy are of a temporary nature: in the long run,
changes in the money supply affect only inflation and have no effect on the economy's
sustainable growth rate. In essence, monetary policy has two attainable goals: to promote
economic stability (minimize fluctuations in the business cycle) and price stability (low
and stable inflation). Because the Fed has only one tool at its disposal, influence over
interest rates, it faces a tradeoff in the pursuit of these two goals - when the two goals
conflict, they cannot both be pursued at once.'

    Congress has delegated responsibility for monetary policy decisions to the Federal
Reserve, but maintains oversight responsibilities. Oversight is made difficult, however,
by the absence of a straightforward relationship between interest rates and economic
performance. Because of changes in investment demand, any given interest rate may be



1 For more information, see CRS Report RL30354, Monetary Policy: Current Status and
Conditions, by Marc Labonte and Gail Makinen.

           Congressional Research Service we The Library of Congress
                 Prepared for Members and Committees of Congress

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