Interdependencies between Monetary policy and Foreign-Exchange Intervention under Inflation Targeting [electronic resource]: The Case of Brazil and the Czech Republic / Luiz de Mello, Diego Moccero and Jean-Yves Gnabo = Interdépendance entre politique monétaire et interventions sur le marché du change dans des régimes de ciblage d'inflation : le cas du Brésil et de la République tchèque / Luiz de Mello, Diego Moccero et Jean-Yves Gnabo
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- Interdépendance entre politique monétaire et interventions sur le marché du change dans des régimes de ciblage d'inflation le cas du Brésil et de la République tchèque
- E52
- C24
- F31
Item type | Home library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Working Paper | Biblioteca Digital | Colección OECD | OECD 245585283155 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Not For Loan |
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The bulk of recent literature on foreign-exchange interventions has overlooked the potential interdependencies that may exist between these operations and the conduct of monetary policy. This is the case even under inflation targeting and especially in emerging-market economies, because central banks often explicitly reserve the right to intervene to calm disorderly markets and to accumulate foreign reserves, and when the exchange rate is perceived as out of step with fundamentals. This paper uses a friction model to estimate intervention reaction functions and the associated marginal effects for Brazil and the Czech Republic since adoption of inflation targeting in these countries in 1999 and 1998, respectively. The main findings are that: i) in both countries interventions occur predominantly to reduce exchange-rate volatility, while in Brazil the central bank also reacts to exchange-rate deviations from medium-term trends; ii) there are strong, asymmetric threshold effects in the reaction functions, and interventions are more likely and of higher magnitudes when they are carried out to depreciate than to appreciate the domestic currency; and iii) interventions seem to take place independently of contemporaneous monetary policy in Brazil, but not in the Czech Republic, where both policies appear to be interrelated.
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