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Working Paper

The Evolution of Cash Transactions: Some Implications for Monetary Policy

This paper considers the implications of a decreasing demand for cash transactions under several monetary policy regimes. A policy of nominal-interest-rate targeting implies that a secular decline in the volume of cash transactions unambiguously leads to accelerating inflation. A policy of maintaining a fixed composition of government liabilities leads to accelerating (decelerating) inflation if agents have sufficiently high (low) levels of risk aversion. A policy of inflation targeting produces falling nominal and real interest rates, while a policy of fixing the rate of money growth can easily lead to indeterminacy and endogenous oscillation in interest rates.


Suggested Citation

Schreft, Stacey, and Bruce Smith. 1997. “The Evolution of Cash Transactions: Some Implications for Monetary Policy.” Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, Financial Services Research Group Working Papers No. 04-97.