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The Founding of the Fed and the Destabilization of the Post-1914 Economy
[report]
1988
unpublished
A standard assumption in the literature on optimal monetary policy is that the proper goal of policy is the reduction of the variation in output around its natural rate level. The stahilization of output has not always been accepted as the primary goal of policy, however. This paper argues that neither the founders of the Federal Reserve System nor the central bankers in charge during the first twenty-five years of the Fed's existence viewed the elimination of short term movements in output as
doi:10.3386/w2701
fatcat:goddr3ckhbgrbowwbjlrnqnfdy