21 January 2026 - 21 January 2026
2:00PM - 3:00PM
Room MHL405, Durham University Business School, Mill Hill Lane,
Free
Seminar by Stefano Corbellini, Sheffield University, External seminar series by the Department of Economics.
Abstract:
This paper analyzes the monetary policy trade-off between defending purchasing powerof consumers and keeping moderate debt cost for borrowers, in the framework of aheterogeneous agent New Keynesian open economy hit by a foreign energy price shock.Raising the interest rate indeed combats the loss in purchasing power due to the energyshock through a real exchange rate appreciation: however, this comes at the expenseof higher interest payments for debtors. The trade-off can be resolved by adopting amilder interest rate policy during the crisis in exchange for a prolonged contractionbeyond the energy shock time span. This interest rate smoothing approach allows tostill experience a real appreciation today, while spreading the impact on debt costsmore evenly over time. This policy counterfactual is analyzed in a quantitative modelof the UK economy under the 2022-2023 energy price hike, where the loss of consumers’purchasing power and the vulnerability of mortgage costs to higher policy rates have been elements of paramount empirical relevance.
Stefano Corbellini, Sheffield University