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9013 Results

Behavioral Learning Equilibria in New Keynesian Models

Staff Working Paper 2022-42 Cars Hommes, Kostas Mavromatis, Tolga Özden, Mei Zhu
We introduce behavioral learning equilibria (BLE) into DSGE models with boundedly rational agents using simple but optimal first order autoregressive forecasting rules. The Smets-Wouters DSGE model with BLE is estimated and fits well with inflation survey expectations. As a policy application, we show that learning requires a lower degree of interest rate smoothing.

How does the Bank of Canada’s balance sheet impact the banking system?

Staff Analytical Note 2022-12 Daniel Bolduc-Zuluaga, Brad Howell, Grahame Johnson
We examine how changes in the Bank of Canada’s balance sheet impact the banking system. Quantitative easing contributed to an increase in the size of the banking system’s balance sheet and an improvement in bank liquidity coverage ratios. Quantitative tightening is expected to partially reverse these impacts. The banking system will have to adjust its liquidity management strategy in response.

André Stenzel

André is a Senior Economist in the Currency Department/Economic Research and Analysis at the Bank of Canada.

Javier Ojea Ferreiro

I hold a MSc in Banking and Quantitative Finance (2016, distinction with honours) and a PhD (2019, cum laude, International PhD Mention, Extraordinary Award) in Quantitative Finance from Complutense University of Madrid (UCM).
September 20, 2022

Speech: University of Waterloo Faculty of Arts

Macroeconomics of the 2020s: What we’ve learned, and what’s to come — Deputy Governor Paul Beaudry speaks at the University of Waterloo Faculty of Arts Distinguished Lecture in Economics. (15:45 (ET) approx.).

The Central Bank’s Dilemma: Look Through Supply Shocks or Control Inflation Expectations?

Staff Working Paper 2022-41 Paul Beaudry, Thomas J. Carter, Amartya Lahiri
When countries are hit by supply shocks, central banks often face the dilemma of either looking through such shocks or reacting to them to ensure that inflation expectations remain anchored. In this paper, we propose a tractable framework to capture this dilemma and then explore optimal policy under a range of assumptions about how expectations are formed.
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