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This paper examines the growth-inflation nexus in Franc zone currency unions. It aims at estimating the inflation threshold above which additional inflationary pressures adversely affect economic expansion. It uses cointegration methods that are applied to data from 14 African countries from the Franc zone over 1970-2018. Based on country-level data, the results indicate that it is possible to increase the threshold levels used by regional central banks to 5.4-5.6 percent in the Central African Monetary Union and 4.3-4.5 percent in the West African Monetary Union. Homogeneous cointegration panel data analyses confirm the need to increase the threshold in Central African Monetary Union countries but do not in the West African Monetary Union countries.
Cointegration --- Currencies and Exchange Rates --- Currency Union --- Economic Growth --- Fixed Exchange Rate --- Inflation --- Monetary Union --- Trade and Regional Integration
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June 1999 - A regime-switching framework is used to study speculative attacks against European Monetary System currencies during 1979-93. Peria uses a regime-switching framework to study speculative attacks against European Monetary System (EMS) currencies during 1979-93. She identifies speculative attacks by modeling exchange rates, reserves, and interest rates as time series subject to discrete regime shifts. She assumes two states: tranquil and speculative. She models the probabilities of switching between states as a function of fundamentals and expectations. She concludes that: The switching models with time-varying transition probabilities capture most of the conventional episodes of speculative attacks; Speculative attacks do not always coincide with currency realignments. Both economic fundamentals and expectations determine the likelihood of switching from a period of tranquility to a speculative attack. The budget deficit appears to be an especially important factor driving the probability of switching to a speculative regime. Given the importance of anticipating and, wherever possible, avoiding crises, it might be useful to conduct forecasting exercises to determine whether the switching framework proposed here can be used to forecast crises in countries outside the sample. Because currency crises tend to occur simultaneously in two or more countries, it also might be useful to adapt the regime-switching framework to explore the role of contagion in explaining crises. This paper-a product of Finance, Development Research Group-is part of a larger effort in the group to understand currency crises. The author may be contacted at mmartinezperia@worldbank.org.
Central Bank --- Crawling Peg --- Currencies --- Currencies and Exchange Rates --- Currency --- Debt Markets --- Dependent Variable --- Devaluations --- Economic Stabilization --- Economic Theory and Research --- Emerging Markets --- European Monetary System --- Exchange Rate --- Exchange Rate Mechanism --- Exchange Rates --- Federal Reserve --- Federal Reserve Bank --- Finance and Financial Sector Development --- Financial Literacy --- Financial Markets --- Fixed Exchange Rate --- Fixed Exchange Rate Regimes --- Fixed Exchange Rate Systems --- Interest Rates --- Macroeconomics and Economic Growth --- Private Sector Development --- Speculative Attack --- Speculative Attacks --- Speculative Pressure
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The paper presents a dynamic model for small to medium open economies operating under a fixed exchange rate regime. The model provides a partial explanation of the channels through which fiscal and monetary policy affects the real exchange rate. An empirical investigation is conducted for the case of Argentina during the currency board period of 1991-2001. Empirical estimates show that fiscal policy may indeed be an efficient instrument for promoting macroeconomic stability insofar as it encourages convergence toward long-run equilibrium and alters the long-term balance between exports and consumption, both private and public. The simulation applied to Argentina shows that if the share of public spending in the economy is higher than the share of imports, an increase in the tax rate will stimulate capital stock slightly, at least in the short term, and depreciate the real effective exchange rate. In the long run, the fiscal policy affects the value of the real exchange rate and consequently external competitiveness.
Currencies and Exchange Rates --- Currency --- Currency board --- Debt Markets --- Economic Stabilization --- Economic Theory and Research --- Emerging Markets --- Finance and Financial Sector Development --- Fiscal Policy --- Fixed Exchange Rate --- Fixed Exchange Rate Regime --- Macroeconomic stability --- Macroeconomics and Economic Growth --- Monetary policy --- Open economies --- Poverty Reduction --- Private Sector Development --- Real exchange rate
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The paper presents a dynamic model for small to medium open economies operating under a fixed exchange rate regime. The model provides a partial explanation of the channels through which fiscal and monetary policy affects the real exchange rate. An empirical investigation is conducted for the case of Argentina during the currency board period of 1991-2001. Empirical estimates show that fiscal policy may indeed be an efficient instrument for promoting macroeconomic stability insofar as it encourages convergence toward long-run equilibrium and alters the long-term balance between exports and consumption, both private and public. The simulation applied to Argentina shows that if the share of public spending in the economy is higher than the share of imports, an increase in the tax rate will stimulate capital stock slightly, at least in the short term, and depreciate the real effective exchange rate. In the long run, the fiscal policy affects the value of the real exchange rate and consequently external competitiveness.
Currencies and Exchange Rates --- Currency --- Currency board --- Debt Markets --- Economic Stabilization --- Economic Theory and Research --- Emerging Markets --- Finance and Financial Sector Development --- Fiscal Policy --- Fixed Exchange Rate --- Fixed Exchange Rate Regime --- Macroeconomic stability --- Macroeconomics and Economic Growth --- Monetary policy --- Open economies --- Poverty Reduction --- Private Sector Development --- Real exchange rate
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August 2000 - Hikes in U.S. interest rates in 1999-2000 have started to spill over to other economies' interest rates, which in many countries have risen to reflect the higher U.S. rates. Are countries with flexible exchange rates better able to isolate their domestic interest rates from this type of negative international shock? Less and less so, as economies become more integrated. Frankel, Schmukler, and Serven empirically study the sensitivity of local interest rates to international interest rates and how that sensitivity is affected by a country's choice of exchange rate regime. To establish the empirical regularities, they use a reduced-form empirical approach to compute both panel and single-country estimates of interest rate sensitivity for a large sample of developing and industrial economies between 1970 and 1999. When using the full sample, they find that: Interest rates are typically lower in economies with fixed exchange rates than in those with flexible exchange rates; More rigid currency regimes tend to exhibit higher transmission than more flexible regimes. In many cases in the 1990s, however, the authors cannot reject full transmission (a slope coefficient equal to 1), even for several countries with floating regimes. The data suggest an upward time trend in the degree to which domestic interest rates are sensitive to international capital movements and developing economies' increased financial integration with the rest of the world. As a result, country-specific estimates for the 1990s reveal few cases of less-than-full transmission of international interest rates to domestic rates, regardless of the currency regime. Country-specific results suggest that only large industrial countries can (or choose to) benefit from independent monetary policy. During the 1990s, interest rates in European countries were fully sensitive to German interest rates but insensitive to U.S. interest rates. This paper-a joint product of Macroeconomics and Growth, Development Research Group, and the Chief Economist Unit, Latin America and the Caribbean Region-is part of a larger effort in the Bank to understand the functioning of alternative currency arrangements. The authors may be contacted at jeffrey_frankel@harvard.edu, sschmukler@worldbank.org, or lserven@worldbank.org.
Currencies and Exchange Rates --- Currency --- Currency Regime --- Currency Regimes --- Currency Risks --- Debt Markets --- Domestic Interest Rates --- Economic Stabilization --- Economies --- Economy --- Emerging Markets --- Exchange Rate --- Exchange Rate Regime --- Exchange Rate Risk --- Finance and Financial Sector Development --- Financial Literacy --- Fixed Exchange Rate --- Flexible Exchange Rate --- Flexible Exchange Rates --- Independent Monetary Policy --- Interest Rate --- Interest Rates --- International Monetary Economics --- Macroeconomic Management --- Macroeconomics and Economic Growth --- Monetary Independence --- Monetary Policy --- Nominal Anchor --- Private Sector Development
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January 2000 - No - there is no systematic association between interest rates and the outcome of speculative attacks. Drawing on evidence from a large sample of speculative attacks in industrial and developing countries, Kraay argues that high interest rates do not defend currencies against speculative attacks. In fact, there is a striking lack of any systematic association between interest rates and the outcome of speculative attacks. The lack of clear empirical evidence on the effects of high interest rates during speculative attacks mirrors the theoretical ambiguities on this issue. This paper - a product of Macroeconomics and Growth, Development Research Group - is part of a larger effort in the group to study the causes and consequences of financial crises. The author may be contacted at akraay@worldbank.org.
Balance Of Payments --- Central Bank --- Currencies and Exchange Rates --- Debt Markets --- Economic Stabilization --- Economic Theory and Research --- Emerging Markets --- Finance and Financial Sector Development --- Financial Literacy --- Fixed Exchange Rate --- Fixed Exchange Rates --- Fixed Nominal Exchange Rates --- Foreign Exchange --- Growth Rates --- Interest Rate Differentials --- Interest Rates --- International Capital Flows --- International Monetary Fund --- Macroeconomic Management --- Macroeconomics and Economic Growth --- Monetary Authorities --- Monetary Authority --- Monetary Economics --- Monetary Policy --- Monetary Shocks --- Nominal Exchange Rate --- Private Sector Development --- Real Exchange Rate --- Real Interest Rates --- Tight Monetary Policy
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November 1999 - Three approaches to regulatory frameworks for financial systems - and a scenario for development of the world financial system that assumes a market solution. In developing the architecture for a financial system, the challenge is to combine deregulation and safety nets against systemic failure with effective prudential regulation and oversight. Klein analyzes three approaches to choosing an adequate regulatory framework for a financial system; Those most worried about panic and herd behavior tend to favor relatively extensive controls on financial institutions' activities, including controls on interest rates and on the volume and direction of lending; Those most concerned about moral hazard advocate abolishing controls and safety nets, seeing the solution in stronger market discipline and reduced powers and discretion for regulators; Mainstream opinion advocates a mix of measures, to both strengthen market discipline and improve regulatory oversight. The approach a country opts for depends on (1) which monetary and exchange rate regime it chooses, (2) whether it is more concerned about moral hazard or about panic and herd behavior, and (3) how the politics of reform shape its solutions. Klein suggests a scenario for development of the global financial system over the next two or three decades that assumes that the final outcome will resemble the market solution - not because that is the optimal policy choice but because of how political weaknesses will interact with advances in settlement technology. In Klein's scenario, the world moves toward a monetary system in which fixed exchange rate systems or de facto currency competition limit the power of central banks. This limits options for discretionary and open-ended liquidity support to help deal with systemic financial crises. The costs of inflexible exchange rates are moderated by new types of wage contracts, using units of account that are correlated with the shocks a particular industry or kind of contract faces - thus maintaining the positive aspects of monetary systems with flexible nominal exchange rates. Mistrust in monetary authorities and the emergence of private settlement systems lead to a return of asset-backed money as the means of payment. The disciplines on financial systems come to resemble somewhat those of historical free banking systems, with financial institutions requiring high levels of equity and payments systems protected only by limited, fully funded safety nets. This paper - a product of Private Participation in Infrastructure, Private Sector Development Department - is part of a larger effort in the department to understand regulatory issues. The author may be contacted at michael.u.klein@si.shell.com.
Banks and Banking Reform --- Central Banks --- Currencies and Exchange Rates --- Currency --- Debt Markets --- Economic Theory and Research --- Emerging Markets --- Exchange --- Exchange Rate --- Finance and Financial Sector Development --- Financial Institutions --- Financial Literacy --- Financial Systems --- Fixed Exchange Rate --- Future --- Interest --- Interest Rates --- International Financial System --- Lending --- Macroeconomics and Economic Growth --- Market --- Market Discipline --- Moral Hazard --- Private Sector Development --- Prudential Regulation --- Regulatory Framework --- Regulatory Oversight --- Safety Nets --- Settlement
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331.156 --- Geldwezen van 1914 tot 1945 --- International finance --- Gold standard --- History. --- 1997 Asian financial crisis. --- Asset. --- Austerity. --- Balance of payments. --- Bank of England. --- Bank run. --- Bank. --- Barry Eichengreen. --- Behalf. --- Bimetallism. --- Bretton Woods system. --- Budget. --- Capital control. --- Capital flight. --- Central bank. --- Commodity. --- Competitiveness. --- Credit (finance). --- Currency. --- Current account. --- Debt crisis. --- Debt. --- Default (finance). --- Deflation. --- Deposit account. --- Depreciation. --- Deutsche Bundesbank. --- Deutsche Mark. --- Devaluation. --- Developed country. --- Economic growth. --- Economic policy. --- Economics. --- Economy. --- European Central Bank. --- European Monetary System. --- Exchange rate. --- Exorbitant privilege. --- Expense. --- Export. --- Fiat money. --- Finance. --- Financial crisis of 2007–08. --- Financial crisis. --- Financial institution. --- Financial intermediary. --- Fiscal policy. --- Fixed exchange-rate system. --- Floating exchange rate. --- Foreign direct investment. --- Foreign exchange market. --- French franc. --- Funding. --- Global imbalances. --- Gold reserve. --- Gold standard. --- Government bond. --- Government debt. --- Guarantee. --- Income. --- Inflation. --- Interest rate. --- Interest. --- International Monetary Fund. --- International monetary systems. --- Investment. --- Investor. --- Latin America. --- Lender of last resort. --- Liability (financial accounting). --- Liberalization. --- Line of credit. --- Market (economics). --- Market liquidity. --- Marshall Plan. --- Monetary authority. --- Monetary policy. --- Monetary reform. --- Monetary system. --- Money supply. --- Payment. --- Policy. --- Pound sterling. --- Provision (accounting). --- Rate of return. --- Receipt. --- Recession. --- Relative price. --- Shortage. --- Special drawing rights. --- Speculation. --- Speculative attack. --- Tariff. --- Tax. --- Trader (finance). --- Unemployment. --- United States dollar. --- Welfare. --- World War II. --- World economy.
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Essential reading for understanding the international economy-now thoroughly updatedLucid, accessible, and provocative, and now thoroughly updated to cover recent events that have shaken the global economy, Globalizing Capital is an indispensable account of the past 150 years of international monetary and financial history-from the classical gold standard to today's post-Bretton Woods "nonsystem." Bringing the story up to the present, this third edition covers the global financial crisis, the Greek bailout, the Euro crisis, the rise of China as a global monetary power, the renewed controversy over the international role of the U.S. dollar, and the currency war. Concise and nontechnical, and with a proven appeal to general readers, students, and specialists alike, Globalizing Capital is a must-read for anyone who wants to understand where the international economy has been-and where it may be going.
International finance --- Gold standard --- History. --- 1997 Asian financial crisis. --- Asset. --- Austerity. --- Balance of payments. --- Bank of England. --- Bank run. --- Bank. --- Barry Eichengreen. --- Behalf. --- Bimetallism. --- Bretton Woods system. --- Budget. --- Capital control. --- Capital flight. --- Central bank. --- Commodity. --- Competitiveness. --- Credit (finance). --- Currency. --- Current account. --- Debt crisis. --- Debt. --- Default (finance). --- Deflation. --- Deposit account. --- Depreciation. --- Deutsche Bundesbank. --- Deutsche Mark. --- Devaluation. --- Developed country. --- Economic growth. --- Economic policy. --- Economics. --- Economy. --- European Central Bank. --- European Monetary System. --- Exchange rate. --- Exorbitant privilege. --- Expense. --- Export. --- Fiat money. --- Finance. --- Financial crisis of 2007–08. --- Financial crisis. --- Financial institution. --- Financial intermediary. --- Fiscal policy. --- Fixed exchange-rate system. --- Floating exchange rate. --- Foreign direct investment. --- Foreign exchange market. --- French franc. --- Funding. --- Global imbalances. --- Gold reserve. --- Gold standard. --- Government bond. --- Government debt. --- Guarantee. --- Income. --- Inflation. --- Interest rate. --- Interest. --- International Monetary Fund. --- International monetary systems. --- Investment. --- Investor. --- Latin America. --- Lender of last resort. --- Liability (financial accounting). --- Liberalization. --- Line of credit. --- Market (economics). --- Market liquidity. --- Marshall Plan. --- Monetary authority. --- Monetary policy. --- Monetary reform. --- Monetary system. --- Money supply. --- Payment. --- Policy. --- Pound sterling. --- Provision (accounting). --- Rate of return. --- Receipt. --- Recession. --- Relative price. --- Shortage. --- Special drawing rights. --- Speculation. --- Speculative attack. --- Tariff. --- Tax. --- Trader (finance). --- Unemployment. --- United States dollar. --- Welfare. --- World War II. --- World economy.
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"Inflation, in which all prices and wages in an economy rise, is mysterious. If a war breaks out in the Middle East, and the price of oil goes up, the mechanism is no great mystery-supply and demand often work pretty visibly. But if you ask the grocer why the price of bread is higher, he or she will blame the wholesaler, who will blame the baker, who will blame the wheat supplier, and so on. Perhaps the ultimate cause is a government printing more money, but there is really no way to know this for certain but to sit down in an office with statistics, armed with some decent economic theory. But current economic theory doesn't really explain why we haven't seen inflation for so long, and more and more economists think that current theory doesn't hold together, or provide much guidance for how central banks should behave if inflation does break out. Many also worry that central banks have much less power over the economy than they think they do, and much less understanding of the mechanism behind what power they do have. The Fiscal Theory of the Price Level is a comprehensive new approach to monetary policy. Economist John Cochrane argues that money has value because the government accepts it for tax payments. This insight, he argues, leads to a deep re-reading of monetary policy and institutions. Inflation comes when a government is unable to repay its debts, rather than from mismanagement of the split of debt between money and bonds. In the book, he will analyze institutional design, historical episodes, and compare fiscal theory to the Keynesian and new-Keynesian theory based on interest rate targets, and to monetarism. The book offers an overview and introduction to the range of contemporary monetary economics and history of thought as well as the fiscal theory"--
Inflation (Finance) --- Monetary policy. --- Prices. --- BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Economics / Macroeconomics. --- Accounting rate of return. --- Asset price inflation. --- Bond Yield. --- Central bank. --- Consumer debt. --- Consumer economy. --- Consumption (economics). --- Credit (finance). --- Credit risk. --- Credit spread (options). --- Currency crisis. --- Currency swap. --- Currency union. --- Currency. --- Debt limit. --- Debt-to-GDP ratio. --- Debt. --- Default (finance). --- Diversification (finance). --- Econometrics. --- Economic equilibrium. --- Economic planning. --- Economics. --- Exchange rate. --- Finance. --- Financial correlation. --- Financial economics. --- Fiscal adjustment. --- Fiscal gap. --- Fiscal multiplier. --- Fiscal policy. --- Fiscal space. --- Fiscal theory of the price level. --- Fixed exchange-rate system. --- Functional finance. --- GDP deflator. --- GDP-linked bond. --- Government budget balance. --- Government debt. --- Inflation swap. --- Inflation targeting. --- Inflation tax. --- Inflation. --- Interest Cost. --- Interest rate risk. --- Interest rate. --- Keynesian economics. --- Liability (financial accounting). --- Liquidity premium. --- Macroeconomic model. --- Macroeconomics. --- Marginal rate of substitution. --- Mark-to-market accounting. --- Market Risk Premium. --- Market clearing. --- Market liquidity. --- Market price. --- Microeconomic reform. --- Modern Monetary Theory. --- Monetarism. --- Monetary Theory. --- Monetary authority. --- Monetary reform. --- Monetary system. --- Money market. --- Money multiplier. --- Nominal interest rate. --- Price Change. --- Price controls. --- Price elasticity of demand. --- Price fixing. --- Price index. --- Price level. --- Public finance. --- Quantity theory of money. --- Real business-cycle theory. --- Real interest rate. --- Real versus nominal value (economics). --- Relative value (economics). --- Risk premium. --- Share price. --- Stochastic discount factor. --- Stock valuation. --- Supply (economics). --- Supply-side economics. --- Swap (finance). --- Tax and spend. --- Tax avoidance. --- Tax policy. --- Tax reform. --- Tax. --- Terminal value (finance). --- The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money. --- The Wealth Effect. --- Tight Monetary Policy. --- Trade credit. --- Treasury Bill. --- Valuation (finance). --- Value (economics). --- Commercial products --- Commodity prices --- Justum pretium --- Price theory --- Consumption (Economics) --- Cost --- Costs, Industrial --- Money --- Cost and standard of living --- Supply and demand --- Value --- Wages --- Willingness to pay --- Monetary management --- Economic policy --- Currency boards --- Money supply --- Finance --- Natural rate of unemployment --- Prices --- Monetary policy
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