Good Luck or Not: Bank of Japan’s Monetary Policy
Abstract:
This paper evaluates whether the Bank of Japan (BOJ)’s “Inflation-Overshooting Commitment” can work to raise inflation rates by over 2 percent to end the zero interest rate policy or whether cost-push shocks luckily give a chance of high inflation rates for the BOJ to escape a liquidity trap. We show that the Taylor-type rule can not replicate inflation overshooting, even though the zero interest rate policy continues as the BOJ’s monetary policy. However, the Taylor-type rule achieves about a 2 percent target in the end, and the cost-push shocks work as good luck to induce high inflation data and justify the escape from a liquidity trap. In the case of the price-level targeting policy, inflation rates increase by more than 2 percent, and the zero interest rate policy continues even after inflation rates sufficiently exceed 2 percent. Under the price-level targeting policy, the cost-push shocks give little good luck in terminating the zerointerest rate policy earlier. Our simulation results imply that the BOJ successfully excludes the effect of positive cost-push shocks to implement the exit policy and conducts the history-dependent policy under inflation-overshooting commitment. Our results do not change for a variety of Japanese parameters for the anchored level of inflation rate, elasticity of demand to real interest rate, and inflation persistence. Moreover, the augmented Taylor-type rule with a strong history dependence can work as a price-level targeting policy.
| Report No.: | HIAS-E-149 |
|---|---|
| Author(s): | Kohei Hasui(a), Yuki Teranishi(b) |
| Affiliation: | (a) Aichi University (b) Keio University |
| Issued Date: | August, 2025 |
| Keywords: | monetary policy; commitment; liquidity trap |
| JEL: | E31,E52,E58,E61 |
| Links: | PDF, HERMES-IR, RePEc |









