nominal anchor
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2021 ◽  
pp. 225-292
Author(s):  
Juan Antonio Morales ◽  
Paul Reding

Monetary anchors play a central role in the practice of monetary policy in LFDCs. Not all LFDCs have an explicit monetary anchor, but if so they rely on three alternative frameworks: exchange rate targeting, monetary targeting, and inflation targeting. This chapter discusses, for each nominal anchor, the advantages, drawbacks, and prerequisites for adopting it, the modalities of implementing it, strictly or flexibly, and the various challenges it raises. The presentation combines theoretical arguments, discussions of empirical evidence, and analysis of selected experiences of LFDCs. The special case of anchors in dollarized economies is examined in depth. The chapter contains two appendices. The first deals with international reserves and their international borrowing arrangements. The second is a case study of monetary unions in sub-Saharan Africa.


2021 ◽  
Vol 39 ◽  
pp. 55-78
Author(s):  
Yasin Kürşat Önder ◽  
Enes Sunel
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
Vol 16 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arshi Shahid ◽  
◽  
Shabib Syed ◽  
Hafiz Ahmad

The present study investigated the impact of monetary policy and globalization on inflation. The study utilized an updated measure of globalization along with two other dimensions i.e., de facto and de jure measure of globalization to examine the nature of the globalization-inflation relationship. It measures the impact of monetary policy variables on inflation, ignoring random shocks as these are considered minor fractions for the inconsistency of the policy instruments. The study also used the Hodrick Prescott filter to calculate the domestic output gap to assess the notion that the changes in the domestic output gap are still relevant to inflation variations in the presence of globalization. Structural modeling of dynamic heterogeneous panel data estimation technique, which accounts for endogeneity and serial correlation issues has also been employed. The results of the study confirm that both global and domestic factors have significant and descriptive power for domestic inflation. Furthermore, the interest rate is found to be a major nominal anchor to affect inflation. The results of panel causality showed that there exists bidirectional causality from inflation to interest rate, while mixed results were found for analyzing monetary aggregates, exchange rate, globalization, and domestic output gap relationships.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 659-690
Author(s):  
Marco Bassetto ◽  
Thomas J. Sargent

This review describes interactions between monetary and fiscal policies that affect equilibrium price levels and interest rates by critically surveying theories about ( a) optimal anticipated inflation, ( b) optimal unanticipated inflation, and ( c) conditions that secure a nominal anchor in the sense of a unique price level path. We contrast incomplete theories whose inputs are budget-feasible sequences of government-issued bonds and money with complete theories whose inputs are bond/money strategies described as sequences of functions that map time t histories into time t government actions. We cite historical episodes that confirm the theoretical insight that lines of authority between a Treasury and a central bank can be ambiguous, obscure, and fragile.


Author(s):  
Eduardo Levy Yeyati

While traditional economic literature often sees nominal variables as irrelevant for the real economy, there is a vast body of analytical and empirical economic work that recognizes that, to the extent they exert a critical influence on the macroeconomic environment through a multiplicity of channels, exchange rate policies (ERP) have important consequences for development. ERP influences economic development in various ways: through its incidence on real variables such as investment and growth (and growth volatility) and on nominal aspects such relative prices or financial depth that, in turn, affect output growth or income distribution, among other development goals. Additionally, ERP, through the expected distribution of the real exchange rate indirectly, influences dimensions such as trade or financial fragility and explains, at least partially, the adoption of the euro—an extreme case of a fixed exchange rate arrangement—or the preference for floating exchange rates in the absence of financial dollarization. Importantly, exchange rate pegs have been (and, in many countries, still are) widely used as a nominal anchor to contain inflation in economies where nominal volatility induces agents to use the exchange rate as an implicit unit of account. All of these channels have been reflected to varying degrees in the choice of exchange rate regimes in recent history. The empirical literature on the consequences of ERP has been plagued by definitional and measurement problems. Whereas few economists would contest the textbook definition of canonical exchange rate regimes (fixed regimes involve a commitment to keep the nominal exchange rate at a given level; floating regimes imply no market intervention by the monetary authorities), reality is more nuanced: Pure floats are hard to find, and the empirical distinction between alternative flexible regimes is not always clear. Moreover, there are many different degrees of exchange rate commitments as well as many alternative anchors, sometimes undisclosed. Finally, it is not unusual that a country that officially declares to peg its currency realigns its parity if it finds the constraints on monetary policy or economic activity too taxing. By the same token, a country that commits to a float may choose to intervene in the foreign exchange market to dampen exchange rate fluctuations. The regime of choice depends critically on the situation of each country at a given point in time as much as on the evolution of the global environment. Because both the ERP debate and real-life choices incorporate national and time-specific aspects that tend to evolve over time, so does the changing focus of the debate. In the post-World War II years, under the Bretton Woods agreement, most countries pegged their currencies to the U.S. dollar, which in turn was kept convertible to gold. In the post-Bretton Woods years, after August 1971 when the United States abandoned unilaterally the convertibility of the dollar, thus bringing the Bretton Woods system to an end, the individual choices of ERP were intimately related to the global and local historical contexts, according to whether policy prioritized the use of the exchange rate as a nominal anchor (in favor of pegged or superfixed exchange rates, with dollarization or the launch of the euro as two extreme examples), as a tool to enhance price competitiveness (as in export-oriented developing countries like China in the 2000s) or as a countercyclical buffer (in favor of floating regimes with limited intervention, the prevalent view in the developed world). Similarly, the declining degree of financial dollarization, combined with the improved quality of monetary institutions, explain the growing popularity of inflation targeting with floating exchange rates in emerging economies. Finally, a prudential leaning-against-the-wind intervention to counter mean reverting global financial cycles and exchange rate swings motivates a more active—and increasingly mainstream—ERP in the late 2000s. The fact that most medium and large developing economies (and virtually all industrial ones) revealed in the 2000s a preference for exchange rate flexibility simply reflects this evolution. Is the combination of inflation targeting (IT) and countercyclical exchange rate intervention a new paradigm? It is still too early to judge. On the one hand, pegs still represent more than half of the IMF reporting countries—particularly, small ones—indicating that exchange rate anchors are still favored by small open economies that give priority to the trade dividend of stable exchange rates and find the conduct of an autonomous monetary policy too costly, due to lack of human capital, scale, or an important non-tradable sector. On the other hand, the work and the empirical evidence on the subject, particularly after the recession of 2008–2009, highlight a number of developments in the way advanced and emerging economies think of the impossible trinity that, in a context of deepening financial integration, casts doubt on the IT paradigm, places the dilemma between nominal and real stability back on the forefront, and postulates an IT 2.0, which includes selective exchange rate interventions as a workable compromise. At any rate, the exchange rate debate is still alive and open.


2019 ◽  
Vol 54 (2) ◽  
pp. 75-90
Author(s):  
Rilina Basu ◽  
Nandini Das ◽  
Ranjanendra Narayan Nag

This article theoretically revisits the issue of how trade openness and inflation are interconnected in the light of conduct and optimal design of monetary policy. Central banks in open economies all over the world face a problematic dilemma when it comes to providing a nominal anchor to the economy in the sense that they have to choose between monetary targeting and inflation targeting. The experience has been varied worldwide with respect to these alternative policies in containing inflation. Different dimensions of openness like fully flexible exchange rate and capital mobility have also had significant impacts on the outcomes of policy changes. In this paper, we have constructed two theoretical open macro-economy models using the AD-AS framework under regressive expectations. The first model considers interest-rate targeting incorporating Taylor rule, whereas the second one deals with monetary targeting. The models show that alternate monetary policy rules do not change the basic results of different macroeconomic policies, although the underlying transmission mechanisms are quite different. JEL Codes: E12, E31, E43, E52, F41


Notitia ◽  
2018 ◽  
pp. 1-9
Author(s):  
Igor Živko ◽  
Mile Bošnjak

Croatian National Bank is not targeting inflation but exchange rate as the nominal anchor or intermediary goal of monetary policy and inflation in Croatia is a dominantly foreign driven phenomenon. Using monthly data on CPI in Croatia from January 1997 up to November 2015, ARIMA (0,1,1) x (0,1,1)12 model is fitted as the one describing CPI behavior pattern and therefore reliable for CPI forecasting. Furthermore, to establish its volatility pattern several ARCH family models are tested and ARCH (1) model is found to be the best fitted one in explaining CPI volatility development in Croatia.


Author(s):  
Gordana Jevđović ◽  
Ivan Milenković

The conventional macroeconomic paradigm is that monetary policy provides the nominal anchor for inflation expectations and that fiscal policy is disciplined in implementing credible and timely revenue-expenditure measures when debt rises, in order to ensure sustainability. In this scenario monetary policy is active, whereas fiscal policy is passive, which is referred to as monetary dominance. However, the proponents of the Fiscal Theory of the Price Level emphasize that another regime may be possible - the one of fiscal dominance. In this setup, primary balance follows some arbitrary path, not necessary compatible with the evolution of government debt, and monetary policy is faced with limited room for manoeuvre as it has no option but to adjust to fiscal developments. Following these theoretical foundations, the aim of this paper is to empirically ascertain the prevailing policy regime (monetary versus fiscal dominance) in five emerging European economies (Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Serbia and Macedonia). In line with expectations, results overwhelmingly suggest that monetary policy may have been subordinated to fiscal policy over the period of analysis in all economies under scrutiny and that fiscally-led regime prevailed.


2018 ◽  
Vol 21 (84) ◽  
pp. 273
Author(s):  
محمود محمد داغر ◽  
حسين عطوان مهوس
Keyword(s):  

يعـد فهم سياسة سعر الصرف مسألة جوهرية بغية التعرف على الآلية التي يعمل بها الاقتصاد الكلي، كما أنَّه من الحيوي للتحليل الاقتصادي الكلي والعمل التجريبي التفريق بين أنظمة الصرف المعلنة وأنظمة الصرف المطبقة فعلاً، إذ أثبتت المسوحات والدراسات الصادرة عن صندوق النقد الدولي بأنَّ هناك تبايناً مابين حقيقة نظام الصرف De facto regime ( نظام الصرف الذي يطبقه البلد فعلياً) وما بين النظام المعلن شرعيا De jure (النظام المعلن عنه عبر وثائق وكتابات المسؤولين الرسميين للمصرف المركزي)، وتطلق الدراسات على نظام الصرف الواقعي De facto (بوصفه الأساس في تقويم السياسة النقدية) نظام الصرف المحفز للإستقرار.       شهدت السياسة النقدية في العراق بعد حصول البنك المركزي على الإستقلالية عام 2004 تحولاً كبيراً، ولكن في ظل نظام مالي يفتقر للتطور وارتفاع السيولة المصرفية  تكون القنوات المعتادة لإنتقال أثر السياسة النقدية غير فاعلة، ومن ثم، فإنَّ الأداة الرئيسة المتاحة للبنك المركزي العراقي هي سعر الصرف، إذ تبنى الأخير سعر الصرف مثبتاً إسمياً Nominal anchor لسياستهِ النقدية، وبذلك فإنَّ مستويات التدخل عبر السوق المفتوحة(مزادات العملة) في العراق، هي التي تعكس حقيقة نظام الصرف بواقعيته De facto وليس بإعلانه عبر الوثائق الرسمية De jure، مما يعني أنَّ تبايناً ما بين نظام الصرف الواقعي و بين نظام الصرف المعلن، إذ إنَّ ريعية الاقتصاد العراقي وضعف مرونة جهازه الانتاجي، فضلاً عن التوسع بالانفاق الحكومي ببنيتهِ التشغيلية على حساب الاستثمارية، كل ذلك أسهم في زَعْزَعَة الاستقرار السعري، الأمر الذي فرض قيداً على السلطة النقدية لتثبيت سعر صرف الدينار أملاً في تحقيق اسقراراً سعرياً


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