As of fall 2011, the number and influence of economists who supported this approach was growing largely the result of a
blog-based campaign by several macroeconomists.
Larry Kudlow, James Pethokoukis and
Tyler Cowen advocate NGDP targeting. Australian economist
John Quiggin supports nominal income targeting, on the basis that "A system of nominal GDP targeting would maintain or enhance the transparency associated with a system based on stated targets, while restoring the balance missing from a monetary policy based solely on the goal of price stability." Supporters of nominal income targeting often self-identify as market monetarists, although
market monetarism encompasses more than nominal income targeting. Former
CEA chair
Christina Romer endorsed a nominal income target in 2011. In 1994, economists
Robert Hall and
Greg Mankiw described a nominal income target as a “reasonably good rule” for the conduct of monetary policy. Among policymakers,
Vince Cable, ex-
United Kingdom Business Secretary, has described himself as "attracted" to nominal income targeting, but declined to elaborate further.
Charles L. Evans, president of the
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, said in July 2012 that "nominal income level targeting is an appropriate policy choice" because of what he claimed was its "safeguard against an unreasonable increase in inflation." However, "recognizing the difficult nature of that policy approach," he also suggested a "more modest proposal" of "a conditional approach, whereby the federal funds rate is not increased until the unemployment rate falls below 7 percent, at least, or until inflation rises above 3 percent over the medium term." Few academic publications analyze nominal income targeting. One study argues that similar monetary policy performs better than real income targeting during crises based on a theoretical model. In June 2015,
Lawrence Summers seemed to suggest that NGDP targeting was a more powerful policy tool than a higher inflation target, although he did not endorse the progressive monetary policy. As Summers notes, setting a target which does not depend on inflation adjustments is more reasonable, and NGDP targeting guarantees that when a real growth rate is low real rates become low. David Beckworth, a long-time proponent of NGDP targeting, produces a brief each quarter to describe the stance of monetary policy in the United States. In what he calls the "NGDP gap," Beckworth measures the "percentage difference between the neutral level of NGDP and the actual level of NGDP." Beckworth uses this finding to argue "whether monetary policy is expansionary or contractionary." ==See also==