Assessing the Lucas Critique in Monetary Policy Models
Glenn D. Rudebusch
Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco
Friday, April 26, 2002
3:00 PM 4:15 PM
Saunders 515
Abstract
Empirical estimates of monetary policy rules suggest that the behavior of
U.S. monetary policymakers changed during the past few decades. However, at
the same time, statistical analyses of lagged representations of the economy,
such as VARs, often have not rejected the null of structural stability. These
two sets of empirical results appear to contradict the Lucas critique. This
paper provides a reconciliation by showing that the apparent policy invariance
of reduced forms is consistent with the magnitude of historical policy shifts
and the relative insensitivity of the reduced forms of plausible forward-looking
macroeconomic specifications to policy shifts.