Working Paper

Monetary Policy and Redistribution: What can or cannot be Neutralized with Mirrleesian Taxes

Firouz Gahvari, Luca Micheletto
CESifo, Munich, 2012

CESifo Working Paper No. 3711

This paper develops an overlapping-generations model with heterogeneous agents in terms of earning ability and cash-in-advance constraint. It shows that tax policy cannot fully replicate or neutralize the redistributive implications of monetary policy. While who gets the extra money becomes irrelevant, the rate of growth of money supply keeps its bite. A second lesson is that the Friedman rule is not in general optimal. The results are due to the existence of another source of heterogeneity among individuals besides differences in earning ability that underlies the Mirrleesian approach to optimal taxation. They hold even in the presence of a general income tax and preferences that are separable in labor supply and goods. If differences in earning ability were the only source of heterogeneity, the fiscal authority would be able to neutralize the effects of a change in the rate of monetary growth and a version of the Friedman rule becomes optimal.

CESifo Category
Public Finance
Monetary Policy and International Finance
Keywords: monetary policy, fiscal policy, redistribution, Friedman rule, heterogeneity, overlapping generations, second best
JEL Classification: H210, E520