Publication | Closed Access
The Nonneutrality of Monetary Policy with Large Price or Wage Setters*
279
Citations
19
References
2000
Year
Alternative Monetary RegimeMonetary PolicyMonetary TheoryEconomic AnalysisWage SettersEconomicsPublic PolicyCompetitive Price SettersPrice-wage SettersEquilibrium RateLabour SupplyLabor EconomicsFinanceMacroeconomicsEconomic PolicyWage InflationMonetary UnionLarge PriceBusinessUnemploymentMicroeconomics
Monetary rules matter for the equilibrium rate of employment when the number of price-wage setters is small, even when assuming rational expectations, complete information, central bank precommitment, and absence of nominal rigidities. If the central bank is nonaccommodating, sufficiently large unions, bargaining independently, have an incentive to moderate sectoral money wages, and thereby expected real wages. The result is an increase in the real money supply, and hence higher demand and employment. This does not hold with accommodating monetary policy since unions' wage decisions cannot then affect the real money supply. A similar argument holds for large monopolistically competitive price setters.
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