Abstract

A model with labor search, limited recordkeeping and market segmentation is provided to explain the correlations between inflation and real variables in the short run, and in the long run. A one-time money injection causes intensive-margin effects on employment, and reduces the unemployment rate in the short run. There are persistent liquidity effects on real variables, inflation and the nominal interest rate, as a result of search frictions in the labor market. Money injections in the long run raise the unemployment rate. The optimal monetary policy minimizes the distortion from labor-search frictions, and eliminates the intertemporal monetary distortion and the market segmentation friction.

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