We consider an otherwise conventional monetary growth model in which spatial separation and limited communication create a transactions role for currency, and stochastic relocation gives rise to financial intermediaries. In this framework we consider how changes in fiscal and monetary policy, and in reserve requirements, affect inflation, capital formation, and nominal interest rates. There is also considerable scope for multiple equilibria; we show how reserve requirements that never bind along actual equilibrium paths can play an important role in avoiding undesirable equilibria. Finally, we demonstrate that changes in (apparently) nonbinding reserve requirements can have significant real effects.
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Paper provided by Iowa State University, Department of Economics in its series Staff General Research Papers with number
5136.
Length: Date of creation: 01 Mar 2002 Date of revision: Publication status: Published in International Economic Review, May 1997, Vol. 38, pp. 321-351. Handle: RePEc:isu:genres:5136
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