English

Optimal Inflation Target: Insights from an Agent-Based Model

Economics 2018-03-21 v2 Physics and Society

Abstract

Which level of inflation should Central Banks be targeting? We investigate this issue in the context of a simplified Agent Based Model of the economy. Depending on the value of the parameters that describe the behaviour of agents (in particular inflation anticipations), we find a rich variety of behaviour at the macro-level. Without any active monetary policy, our ABM economy can be in a high inflation/high output state, or in a low inflation/low output state. Hyper-inflation, deflation and "business cycles" between coexisting states are also found. We then introduce a Central Bank with a Taylor rule-based inflation target, and study the resulting aggregate variables. Our main result is that too-low inflation targets are in general detrimental to a CB-monitored economy. One symptom is a persistent under-realisation of inflation, perhaps similar to the current macroeconomic situation. Higher inflation targets are found to improve both unemployment and negative interest rate episodes. Our results are compared with the predictions of the standard DSGE model.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1709.05117,
  title  = {Optimal Inflation Target: Insights from an Agent-Based Model},
  author = {Jean-Philippe Bouchaud and Stanislao Gualdi and Marco Tarzia and Francesco Zamponi},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1709.05117},
  year   = {2018}
}

Comments

19 pages, 6 figures. The paper is under review for the online journal "Economics". The reviews are public at this link: http://www.economics-ejournal.org/economics/discussionpapers/2017-64 . This version has been modified and improved following the advice of the reviewers and commentators

R2 v1 2026-06-22T21:44:06.720Z