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ACADEMY OF ECONOMIC STUDIES DOCTORAL SCHOOL OF FINANCE AND BANKING. DISSERTATION PAPER SOME ASPECTS REGARDING MONETARY POLICY TRANSMISSION MECHANISM IN CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPEAN COUNTRIES MSc Student: Andrei Birman Supervisor: Professor Mois ă Alt ă r BUCHAREST -2004. Content.
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ACADEMY OF ECONOMIC STUDIESDOCTORAL SCHOOL OF FINANCE AND BANKING DISSERTATION PAPER SOME ASPECTS REGARDING MONETARY POLICY TRANSMISSION MECHANISM IN CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPEAN COUNTRIES MSc Student: Andrei Birman Supervisor: Professor Moisă Altăr BUCHAREST -2004
Content • Introduction • Monetary policy transmission mechanism; theory and evidence • Identification and estimation • Discussion of the results • Concluding remarks References
Monetary policy transmission mechanism • Traditional interest rate channel; Blinder, 1997:”interest sensitivity of business investment spending is subject to doubt……may have more to do with homebuilding and consumer durables” • Other assets price channel: exchange rates: affect relative prices between domestic and foreign goods affect domestic/foreign demand for domestic goodsaggregate demand channel equities • Credit view: (Bernanke, Gertler)emphasize a combination of asymmetric information problems in credit markets and portfolio balance effects based on imperfect asset substitutability bank lending channel balance sheet channel – “finnacial accelerator”: the impact on investment of small interest changes is magnified by balance sheet effects; • Modern view (Cecchetti): assigns a special role to the financial structure and legal system.
Czech Republic 1998:01-2004:01 (1997 - currency turbulence and price liberalization) Hungary 1998:01-2004:02 (still some monetary policy independence; availability of data) Poland 1997:06 – 2004:01 (exchange rate band +/- 10% ) Romania 1997:06 – 2004:01 ( 1997 price liberalization) IDENTIFICATION and ESTIMATIONVector Autoregressions –VARsCholesky decompositionModel 1 [P Y E R M2] Model 2 [P Y E R M1]
Equation for nominal effective exchange rate Equation for industrial production
Equation for M2 Equation for interest rate
Identification of Interest rate shocks(full line – impulse response function; dotted lines – 2 Std.error bands)
Identification of Money shocks(full line – impulse response function; dotted lines – 2 Std.error bands)Responses to money shock (first row M2, second row M1)
Factors that could influence and/or determine opposite responses from the two monetary aggregates. Czech National Bank Inflation Report, April 2004,page 8 “….the monetary aggregate M1 maintained a growth rate that was supported by low interest rates, which are giving rise to a long term upward tendency in demand deposits at the expense of time deposits of corporations and households”. National Bank of Romania, Inflation Report 2/2003, page 42
Identification of Exchange rate shocks(full line – impulse response function; dotted lines – 2 Std.error bands)
Variance decomposition and Granger causality testsprices --explain large part of their variance – inflation persistence --procentual variance of P due to E - ~40% at 12 months, in Czech R. and Romania industrial production – explain much of its variance – supply side has its own sources of variation --still, in Hungary and Poland, R accounts for Y variance at longer horizonsBroad nominal money supply explain ~20% of price variance and (except Czech R.) none of the Y variance
interest rate”price puzzle” in Poland , Czech R. (probably can be reduced if including foreign variables); a fall in Romanian prices; not significant response for Hungary; industrial production in Hungary and Poland; no response for Romania and Czech R. Mixed evidence about monetary aggregates; greater interest rate elasticity of M1, but, on average, do not seem to be better policy actions indicators than interest rates; Exchange rates play an important role in each country; seem to respond to interest rate movements; and conversly, generates interst rate responses; Future work must look inside the “black box”; The fiscal side must be taken into consideration; Concluding Remarks
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*****Inflation Report, (2003) third quarter, National Bank of Poland*****Inflation Report (2004), april, Czech National Bank *****Inflation Report 2/2003 National Bank of Romania*****Quarterly Inflation Report, February 2004, National Bank of Hungary