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ACADEMY OF ECONOMIC STUDIES DOCTORAL SCHOOL OF FINANCE AND BANKING

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 STUDIES DOCTORAL SCHOOL OF FINANCE AND BANKING

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  1. 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

  2. Content • Introduction • Monetary policy transmission mechanism; theory and evidence • Identification and estimation • Discussion of the results • Concluding remarks References

  3. 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 goodsaggregate 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.

  4. 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]

  5. Variables used:

  6. Poland – unit root tests

  7. Polonia - Model 1 [P Y E R M2] – 2 lags

  8. Equation for prices

  9. Equation for nominal effective exchange rate Equation for industrial production

  10. Equation for M2 Equation for interest rate

  11. Identification of Interest rate shocks(full line – impulse response function; dotted lines – 2 Std.error bands)

  12. 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)

  13. 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

  14. Identification of Exchange rate shocks(full line – impulse response function; dotted lines – 2 Std.error bands)

  15. 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

  16.  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

  17. References [1] Altar, Moisa (2003), „Macroeconomics” , lecture notes, DOFIN [2] Bernanke, Ben S. and Alan S. Blinder (1992), „The Federal Funds Rate and the Channels of Monetary Transmission”, The American Economic Review, Vol.82, No.4 (September), 901-921 [3] ---------- (1988), „Credit, Money and Aggregate Demand”, NBER working paper no.2534 [4] Bernanke, Ben S. and Mark Gertler (1995), „Inside the Black Box: The Credit Channel of Monetary Policy Transmission”, NBER working paper no. 5146 [5] Bernanke, Ben S. and Mishkin, Frederic (1997), „Inflation Targeting: A New Framework for Monetary Policy?”, NBER Working Paper Series, Working Paper 5893 [6] Blanchard, Olivier (1997), „Is There a Core of Usable Macroeconomics?”, The American Economic Review, Vol. 87, No. 2, pp. 244-246 [7]-----------, (2003), „Comments on „Inflation targeting in transition economies; Experience and Prospects”, by Jiri Jonas and Frederic Mishkin”, NBER Conference on Inflation Targeting [8] Blinder, Alan, (1997), „Is There a Core of Usable Macroeconomics We Should All Believe In?”,The American Economic Review, Vol. 87, No. 2, pp. 240-243 [9] Botel, Cezar (2002) , „The Determinants of Inflation in Romania: June 1997-August 2001; A strucural VAR approach”, National Bank of Romania paper series, [10] Brada, Josef and Ali Kutan (1999), „The End of Moderate Inflation in Three Transition Economies?” The William Davidson Institute at Univ. of Michigan Business School, wp 230 [11] Cecchetti, Stephen G., (1999), Legal Structure, Financial Structure, and the Monetary Policy Transmission Mechanism, NBER working paper no.7151 [12]------------. (1995), „Distinguishing Theories of the Monetary Transmission Mechanism”, Federal Bank of St. Louis Review May/June [13] Christiano, Lawrence J., Martin Eichenbaum and Charles L. Evans (1998), „Monetary Policy Shocks: What Have We Learned and to What End?”, Lawrence Christiano personal website [14] Clarida, Richard, Jordi Gali and Mark Gertler (1999), „The Science of Monetary Policy: A New Keynesian Perspective”, NBER working paper no 7147 [15] Cushman, David and Tao Zha (1995), „Identifying Monetary Policy in a Small Open Economy Under Flexible Exchange Rates”, Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, working paper no.95-7;

  18. [16] Eichenbaum, Martin (1997), „Some Thoughts on Practical Stabilization Policy”, The American Economic Review, Vol. 87, No. 2, pp. 236-239 [17] Enders, Walter, (1993), „Applied Econometric Time Series”, John Wiley&Sons Press [18] Friedman, Milton (1968), „The Role of Monetary Policy”, American Economic Review, Vol.58, No.1 (March), pp. 1-17 [19] Greene, William H., (2000), „Econometric Analysis”, Prentice Hall International Press [20] Jakab, Zoltan and Mihaly Kovacs (2003), „Explaining the Exchange Rate Pass-Through in Hungary: Simulations with the NIGEM Model”, MNB working paper [21] Jonas, Jiri and Frederic S. Mishkin, (2003), „Inflation Targeting in Transition Economies:Experiences and Prospects”, NBER working paper no. 123 [22] Leeper, Eric, Christopher A. Sims, and Tao Zha, (1996), „What does Monetary Policy Do?”, Christopher Sims personal website [23] Lutkepohl, Helmut and Jorg Breitung (1996), „Impulse response Analysis of Vector Autoregressive Processes”, Institut fur Statistik und Okonometrie, Humboldt –Universitat zu Berlin [24] Meltzer, Alan, (1995), „Monetary, Credit and (other)Transmission Processes: a monetaristperspective”, Journal of Economic Perspectives, Vol.9, No.4 (Autumn), 49-72 [25] Mishkin, S. Frederic, (2001), „The Economics of Money, Banking and Financial Markets”, sixth edition, Addison-Wesley Press [26] Monticelli, Carlo and Oreste Tristani, (1999), „What does the single monetary policy do? ASVAR benchmark for the European Central Bank”, European Central Bank working paper no.2; [27] Obstfeld, Maurice and Kenneth Rogoff, (1996), „Foundations of International Macroeconomics”, The MIT Press [28] Peersman, Gert and Benoit Mojon, (2001), „A VAR Description of the Effects of MonetaryPolicy in the Individual Coutries of the Euro Area”, Eurosystem Monetary Transmission Mechanism Network, wp 92 [29] Peersman, Gert and Frank Smets , (2001), „The Monetary Transmission Mechanism in the Euro Area: more evidence from VAR analysis”, European Central Bank, working paper no.91; [30] Schmitt-Grohe, Stephanie and Martin Uribe (2003), „International Macroeconomics”, lecture notes, Martin Uribe personal website [31] Sims, Christopher A., (1991), „Interpreting The Macroeconomics Time Series Facts: The Effects Of Monetary Policy”, personal website [32]----------., (1972), „Money, Income and Causality”, The American EconomicReview, Vol.62, No.4 (September), 540-552 [33] Solow, M. Robert, (1997), „Is There a Core of Usable Macroeconomics We Should All Believe In?”, The American Economic Review, Vol. 87, No. 2, pp. 230-232 [34] Svensson, Lars E.O. (2000), „Open-economy inflation targeting”, Journal of International Economics 50 (2000) pg.155-183 [35] Taylor, John (1997), „A Core of Practical Macroeconomics”, The American Economic Review, Vol. 87, No. 2, pp. 233-235 [36] Zha, Tao, (1997), „Identifying Monetary Policy: A primer”, Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta Economic Review, Second Quarter

  19. *****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

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