U.S. MONETARY POLICYINANINTEGRATING WORLD: 1960 TO 2000

U.S. monetary policy has a purely domestic mandate. The Federal Reserve’s task is to promote “maximum employment, price stability and moderate, long-term interest rates ” within the United States. 1 Or, as Arthur Burns put it in 1973, “American monetary policy is not made in Paris; it is made in Was...

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Main Authors: Richard N. Cooper, Jane Sneddon Little
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
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Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.203.4265
http://www.bos.frb.org/economic/conf/conf45/conf45e.pdf
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Summary:U.S. monetary policy has a purely domestic mandate. The Federal Reserve’s task is to promote “maximum employment, price stability and moderate, long-term interest rates ” within the United States. 1 Or, as Arthur Burns put it in 1973, “American monetary policy is not made in Paris; it is made in Washington. ” 2 That said, this paper will argue that global developments have played a significant role in setting the focus and practice of U.S. monetary policy in the years since Frank Morris became President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston. When Frank Morris joined the Fed in 1968, the Bretton Woods system—based as it was on the dollar’s unsustainable link to gold—was on the verge of collapse. Even so, the U.S. dollar remained the only viable international transactions currency at that time, and the financial “world ” encompassed a mere handful of nations edging the North Atlantic, plus, grudgingly, Japan. Today, of course, the major currencies are floating, the euro is increasingly used as a transactions currency, and investor horizons have widened to include emerging markets on every continent. Within this changed setting, the U.S. economy has itself become