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Do central banks use some form of engineering-style PID control systems/feedback loops to implement monetary policy?

I'm an electrical engineering student taking microeconomics/macroeconomics and a lot of it, at least in terms of government policy to control inflation and interest rates, seems applicable to control systems engineering. However, I can't find a great deal of hard literature about it.

Just as a for instance, one could use PID control to set an output, say inflation rate, to follow a specific course or remain steady given certain inputs, say GDP or interest rates or productivity, and given external disturbances, say Brexit. And even if the controller can't prevent catastrophes altogether, it can dampen the response so that sudden and jerky crashes are smoothed out.

Why or why not does economic policy use established control theory? If it does, what applications can this be seen?

Thanks in advance!

Charles Clayton
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Economists have been exploring control theory applications to macro economics for decades. For example, here is a 40 year-old research paper written in 1976 on the topic.

top of page 2 (also numbered 171)

In the past decade, a number of engineers and economists have asked the question: "If modern control theory can improve the guidance of airplanes and spacecraft, can it also help in the control of inflation and unemployment?"

Non-linear adaptive human behavior, uncertainty and governmental decentralization of control (i.e., democracy) are the main reasons I believe control theory has not become a more common tool for policy makers. Economics is simply not an exact science. Whereas engineering is more so. So control theory is more useful in the engineering discipline.

FreeMarketUnicorn
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For a PID system to work, you need to be (at least approximately) correct about the relationship between the variables you are trying to manage. Unfortunately the relationships between macroeconomic variables as predicted by mainstream economics has such a poor correspondence with reality, that any PID system based on these theories is doomed to fail.

Mick
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A small addendum. Lars Peter Hansen and Thomas J. Sargent wrote the book "Robustness", which is an attempt to apply robust control to economics. They treated robust control from a game theoretical perspective.

In general, ecomics uses optimal control theory, which was the state of the art in the 1960s. The state of the art in the 1990s control theory (when I last worked in the field) was robust control, which fairly explicitly rejected the optimal control methodology.

Robust control introduced the notion of model error. (The game theoretic approach used by Hansen and Sargent attempts to emulate uncertainty via game theory, but the equivalence between model uncertainty and the game theoretic approach breaks down for nonlinear systems.) Without taking into account the reality that our models are incorrect, optimal control strategies tended to fail. A test pilot was killed by a defective optimal controller, and certification boards barred such controllers from aircraft. This killed optimal control as a strategy for control design.

Brian Romanchuk
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  • Interesting insights! Can you provide any reference related to "... robust control, which fairly explicitly rejected the optimal control methodology"?

    And also for these two:"the equivalence between model uncertainty and the game theoretic approach breaks down for nonlinear systems" and "A test pilot was killed by a defective optimal controller, and certification boards barred such controllers from aircraft. This killed optimal control as a strategy for control design"? Many thanks! :)

    – Barzi2001 Nov 27 '20 at 12:55
  • You’d need to read a text on robust control. The reference I would use is “Robust and Optimal Control,” by Zhou, Doyle, and Glover, but it’s out of print, and I only have a pre-publication draft manuscript. 2) The amount of work nonlinear robust was limited, but it was my field. The game theoretic approach worked for linear systems because the disturbance is additive; nonlinear systems are not additive. 3) The test pilot story was well known by people in the area, but it was either in the 1960s/early 1970s, no idea how to track down an official history.
  • – Brian Romanchuk Nov 27 '20 at 14:18
  • As an addendum: I worked with people who were developing aircraft controls in the early 1990s, the certification requirements would have made the use of optimal control impossible. – Brian Romanchuk Nov 27 '20 at 14:19