nep-cba New Economics Papers
on Central Banking
Issue of 2025–05–26
24 papers chosen by
Sergey E. Pekarski, Higher School of Economics


  1. Tradeoffs over Rate Cycles: Activity, Inflation and the Price Level By Kristin Forbes; Jongrim Ha; M. Ayhan Kose
  2. Monetary policy at the turn of financial markets: A forerunner or follower? By Osoro, Jared; Talam, Camilla
  3. Lessons for the European Central Bank from the 2021-23 inflationary episode By Pablo Hernandez de Cos
  4. Capturing international influences in U.S. monetary policy through a NLP approach By Nicolas de Roux; Laurent Ferrara
  5. Support Policies and Inflationary Pressures: A Critical Review of 2020-2022 in the Light of the 2008 Experience By GEORGAKAS, IOANNIS
  6. Monetary Shocks and Inflation: Global Evidence from Trilemma-Based Identification By Cameron Haas; Mateo Hoyos; Emiliano Libman; Guilherme K. Martins; Arslan Razmi
  7. Household Heterogeneity and the Lending Channel of Monetary Policy By Sumit Agarwal; Sergio Mayordomo; María Rodríguez-Moreno; Emanuele Tarantino
  8. Liquidity dependencies in the euro area By Soares, Carla
  9. Optimal Inflation Targeting By Pedro Henrique Alves Pereira
  10. Optimal Monetarist Arithmetic or How to Inflate If You Must By Rodolfo E. Manuelli
  11. On the Interaction between Monetary and Fiscal Policy: Developments in Macroeconomics since the Global Financial Crisis By Mitsuru Katagiri; Yusuke Oh; Yasutaka Ogawa; Nao Sudo; Takeki Sunakawa
  12. Overcoming myopia in the ECB's 2025 monetary policy strategy review By van 't Klooster, Jens
  13. The ECB's Pandemic Emergency Purchase Programme and Fiscal Policy: Synergies or Conflict? By António Afonso; Jorge Braga Ferreira
  14. Monetary Policy and Real Estate Price Distortions: How Bank Lending Amplifies Housing Market Imbalances By Vera Baye; Valeriya Dinger
  15. From purchases to exit: central bank interventions in corporate debt markets By Breckenfelder, Johannes; Schepens, Glenn
  16. Cross-Border Bank Flows, Regional Household Credit Booms, and Bank Risk-Taking By Boddin , Dominik; te Kaat, Daniel Marcel; Roszbach , Kasper
  17. Can Financial Hedging Serve Macroprudential Objectives? By Andrian, Leandro Gaston; Leon-Diaz, John; Rojas, Eugenio
  18. Macroeconomic imbalances evolution and their effect on bank intermediation cost in Kenya By Ndwiga, David; Makunda, Geraldine
  19. Peer Effects in Macroeconomic Expectations By Dräger, Lena; Gründler, Klaus; Potrafke, Niklas
  20. Fiscal Dominance and the Maturity Structure of Debt By Piyali Das; Chetan Ghate; Subhadeep Halder
  21. Looking-forward to Net Zero: How Agent's Expectations and Policy Choices Drive Economic Outcomes in Climate Scenarios By Ed Cornforth; Lea de greef; Patricia Sánchez Juanino
  22. The Inflation Uncertainty Amplifier By Efrem Castelnuovo; Giovanni Pellegrino; Laust L. Særkjær
  23. Credit-risk determinants of Islamic banks in Jordan: Macroeconomic conditions and monetary policy By Zakaria Savon
  24. Not a steamroller, a 3D process: Scientization at the Bank of England By Aurélien Goutsmedt; Francesco Sergi; François Claveau; Clément Fontan

  1. By: Kristin Forbes; Jongrim Ha; M. Ayhan Kose
    Abstract: Central banks often face tradeoffs in how their monetary policy decisions impact economic activity (including employment), inflation and the price level. This paper assesses how these tradeoffs have evolved over time and varied across countries, with a focus on understanding the post-pandemic adjustment. To make these comparisons, we compile a cross-country, historical database of “rate cycles†(i.e., easing and tightening phases for monetary policy) for 24 advanced economies from 1970 through 2024. This allows us to quantify the characteristics of interest rate adjustments and corresponding macroeconomic outcomes and tradeoffs. We also calculate Sacrifice Ratios (output losses per inflation reduction) and document a historically low “sacrifice†during the post-pandemic tightening. This popular measure, however, ignores adjustments in the price level—which increased by more after the pandemic than over the past four decades. A series of regressions and simulations suggest monetary policy (and particularly the timing and aggressiveness of rate hikes) play a meaningful role in explaining these tradeoffs and how adjustments occur during tightening phases. Central bank credibility is the one measure we assess that corresponds to only positive outcomes and no difficult tradeoffs.
    Keywords: monetary policy, interest rates, central bank, Sacrifice Ratio, business fluctuations, prices, employment
    JEL: E31 E32 E43 E52 E58 F33 F44 N10
    Date: 2025–05
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:een:camaaa:2025-30
  2. By: Osoro, Jared; Talam, Camilla
    Abstract: This paper seeks to establish whether the monetary policy stance of Central bank of Kenya (CBK) at the turn of financial markets is pre-emptive or a cleanup. The feedback loop between monetary policy reaction and the markets' response presupposes a sequencing that runs from the former to the latter. That hardly rule out the possibility of monetary policy responding to financial markets' actions, not necessarily preempting them. Deploying a structural vector autoregressive (SVAR) model on Kenyan data for the period December 2013 to June 2024, we establish that there is a dynamic interaction among key financial market prices that is not necessarily at the prompting of monetary policy. This points to how financial markets are pre-emptive, and the monetary authority playing catchup. Such sequencing comes with the possibility of monetary policy reacting to market movements more than markets responding to monetary policy signal, underlying the tension between monetary policy and fiscal policy. The direct connection between the CBK's policy signal and the inter-bank rate justifies the CBK's interest rate corridor around the former. We however consider that as a necessary but not sufficient framework for efficient policy signalling and transmission unless it is accompanied by measures to address inter-bank market segmentation as well as those that can injects vibrancy in the horizontal repo market. We further contend that the positioning of the foreign exchange policy in support of monetary policy objectives is encumbered by the small-open-economy attributes that limits the assumption that full flexibility is sufficient for full effectiveness.
    Keywords: Monetary policy, Monetary policy transmission, Financial market, Kenya
    Date: 2025
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:zbw:kbawps:316415
  3. By: Pablo Hernandez de Cos (Peterson Institute for International Economics)
    Abstract: Since mid-2021, the euro area economy has gone through several shocks, leading to the highest inflation since the creation of the European Monetary Union. A forceful and persistent response from the European Central Bank, grounded in the monetary policy framework it agreed in 2021 ahead of the inflationary episode, has succeeded in bringing inflation down and delivering on the central bank's price stability mandate. The framework will be reviewed in 2025, and it might conclude that there is no need for a drastic change. Nevertheless, this assessment should be compatible with identifying some areas for improvement. In particular, the 2021 review was primarily focused on the effective lower bound. The recent inflationary episode, together with high ongoing uncertainty, indicate that the articulation of monetary policy strategy frameworks should be robust to very different scenarios. Likely persistence of high levels of uncertainty over the next few years will also require an emphasis on flexibility to adapt to the magnitude, origin, and persistence of shocks. Unconditional forward guidance should be avoided. In addition, there might be a need to more clearly distinguish in the future, when possible, between quantitative easing for market functioning versus monetary stimulus, which could incentivize a careful assessment of the amount, duration, and structure of any asset purchase program. Communication also needs to be improved in relation to the level of uncertainty and its consequences for monetary policymaking with, for instance, greater use of scenarios and sensitivity analyses as appropriate. Improving forecasting/modeling tools, in particular when dealing with large supply shocks, and understanding the roles of different measures of inflation expectations should also be priorities.
    Keywords: Inflation, European Central Bank, Monetary Policy
    JEL: E02 E17 E31 E52 E58
    Date: 2025–05
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:iie:wpaper:wp25-10
  4. By: Nicolas de Roux; Laurent Ferrara
    Abstract: Officially, the U.S. Federal Reserve has a statutory dual domestic mandate of price stability and full employment, but, in this paper, we question the role of the international environment in shaping Fed monetary policy decisions. In this respect, we use minutes of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) and construct indexes of the attention paid by U.S. monetary policymakers to the international economic and financial situation. These indexes are built by applying natural language processing (NLP) techniques ranging from word count to built-from-scratch machine learning models, to OpenAI's GPT models. By integrating those text-based indicators into a Taylor rule, we derive various quantitative measures of the external influences on Fed decisions. Our results show that when there is a focus on international topics within the FOMC, the Fed’s monetary policy generally tends to be more accommodative than expected by a standard Taylor rule. This result is robust to various alternatives that includes a time-varying neutral interest rate or a shadow central bank interest rate.
    Keywords: Monetary policy, Federal Reserve, FOMC minutes, International environment, Natural Language Processing, Machine Learning
    JEL: E52 F42 C54
    Date: 2025
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:drm:wpaper:2025-23
  5. By: GEORGAKAS, IOANNIS
    Abstract: We examine the relationship between expansionary monetary and fiscal policy and inflation in two different periods: the 2008 global financial crisis and the COVID-19 pandemic period from 2020 to 2022. In the first case, we analyze the response of central banks through interest rate cuts and quantitative easing in an environment of negative inflation and low demand. In the second, the much more intense monetary and fiscal intervention is examined, accompanied by direct transfers to households and firms, leading to widespread inflationary pressures from 2021 onwards. We attempt to compare the features and effects of the two policies, highlighting the effects of excessive liquidity, deficit financing, and delayed tightening. We conclude that treating inflation as a "transitory phenomenon" was a critical miscalculation. The need for macroeconomic stability, timely interest rate adjustment, and restoration of monetary credibility is stressed
    Keywords: monetary policy, inflation, Federal Reserve, European Central Bank, interest rates, quantitative easing, 2008 crisis, COVID-19 pandemic, monetary policy, inflation
    JEL: E31 E52 E62
    Date: 2025–04–08
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:pra:mprapa:124405
  6. By: Cameron Haas (Department of Economics, UMass Amherst); Mateo Hoyos (Department of Economics, CIDE); Emiliano Libman (Conicet, Argentina); Guilherme K. Martins (Department of Economics, University of Leeds); Arslan Razmi (Department of Economics, UMass Amherst)
    Abstract: After decades of low and stable inflation, recent global events —such as the COVID-19 pandemic and the Russian invasion of Ukraine—triggered a resurgence in inflationary pressures, prompting central banks worldwide to tighten monetary policy. This paper examines whether monetary policy effectively curbs inflation by employing a trilemma-based identification strategy on a panel dataset of 36 developing and 8 developed economies from 1990 to 2017. Using higher-frequency monthly data, we improve on traditional quarterly or annual approaches by more precisely capturing central bank responses. By applying our theory-driven, trilemma-based identification strategy to a sample of developing countries, we bring novel insights to existing literature. Our findings indicate that monetary policy shocks have significant but impermanent effects on inflation. A 100 basis point interest rate hike lowers the price level by 3.7% at its peak after six months, with effects fading within 18 months. Crucially, our results do not exhibit the “price puzzle, ” reinforcing the credibility of our identification strategy. Additionally, we find that monetary policy effects are state-dependent, with stronger disinflationary impacts during high-inflation periods and in economies with lower GDP per capita or higher commodity export dependence. These findings highlight the heterogeneity in monetary policy transmission, underscoring the need for tailored policy responses across different economic contexts.
    Keywords: interest rates, monetary experiments, trilemma, instrumental variables, local projections
    JEL: E01 E30 E32 E44 E47 E51 F33 F42 F44
    Date: 2025–05
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:emc:wpaper:dte650
  7. By: Sumit Agarwal (NUS); Sergio Mayordomo (BANCO DE ESPAÑA); María Rodríguez-Moreno (BANCO DE ESPAÑA); Emanuele Tarantino (LUISS, EIEF, CEPR, AND EUROPEAN COMMISSION)
    Abstract: This paper examines how monetary policy affects corporate lending through its impact on household balance sheets, bridging the gap between the cash flow and bank lending channels. When policy rates rise, households with variable-rate debt face higher monthly payments, prompting early mortgage repayments, particularly among high-income borrowers. Exploiting the monetary tightening between July 2022 and September 2023 as a policy experiment, we show that banks that are more exposed to variable-rate mortgages granted to higher-income households increase their supply of corporate credit, especially to micro and small firms. However, no variation is observed in the balance of household credit or in other investment items on the banks’ balance sheets. Indeed, banks facing higher liquidity constraints tend to extend more corporate credit as their exposure to early redemptions increases. Our findings provide new evidence on how household financial constraints shape monetary policy transmission, offering novel insights into the interplay between household debt dynamics and corporate credit allocation.
    Keywords: floating-rate mortgages, early redemption, monetary policy tightening, monetary policy transmission, corporate lending, bank liquidity
    JEL: D14 E43 E52 G21
    Date: 2025–05
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:bde:wpaper:2524
  8. By: Soares, Carla
    Abstract: This study investigates to what extent the significant liquidity injections by the ECB over the past 15 years may have created a dependency by banks on central bank liquidity itself. Following Acharya et al. (2024), I examine whether the ECB's liquidity provision changed banks' incentives to increase liquid deposits, potentially heightening their susceptibility to liquidity shocks. Using both aggregate and bank-level data, I find that euro area banks tend to increase demand deposits and decrease time deposits with their holdings of excess reserves over the liquidity expansion phase and do not revert when aggregate liquidity starts to shrink. However, this is contained to specific periods, when interest rates were low and stable. The differences relative to the US could be related to distinct sources of liquidity and regulatory frameworks governing liquidity. JEL Classification: E5, G21
    Keywords: central bank liquidity, deposits, euro area, monetary policy
    Date: 2025–05
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ecb:ecbwps:20253056
  9. By: Pedro Henrique Alves Pereira
    Abstract: This paper examines optimal inflation targeting, determining the best inflation target and policy response using a DSGE model with adaptive price-setting firms, in the form of a hybrid Phillips Curve. The results indicate a zero inflation target maximizes household welfare, as higher inflation increases volatility and economic inefficiency. As inflation targets rise, monetary policy must respond more aggressively to shocks and deviations from the target. Notably, the optimal policy does not react to output gaps. These findings highlight the importance of credible and well-structured monetary policies in ensuring macroeconomic stability and the growing costs of inflation (in terms of households’ welfare).
    Date: 2025–04
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:bcb:wpaper:623
  10. By: Rodolfo E. Manuelli
    Abstract: In their celebrated 1981 paper "Some Unpleasant Monetarist Arithmetic, " Sargent and Wallace show that when a central bank is required to transfer resources to the fiscal authority, it faces a trade-off: if it chooses to keep inflation low in the short run, then it must be willing to accept higher inflation in the long run. In this paper I characterize the optimal interest rate (and inflation) policy by a central bank faced with a version of the Sargent-Wallace scenario. I explore this question in a setting in which a certain amount has to be transferred for an uncertain period of time. I find that uncertainty makes the optimal policy to deviate from a Barro-like martingale behavior of taxes or a Lucas-Stokey type of solution where the tax (or distortion) inherits the properties of the stochastic process for transfers. The optimal nominal interest rate (and inflation) is such that the central bank chooses to issue debt (e.g., reverse repos) instead of raising the required amount of seigniorage. Initially inflation is lower than what would be required to raise enough resources to pay for the transfer plus the interest on existing debt. The intuition for this result is that the monetary authority is taking advantage of an option: if the transfer period is short, then (relatively) low inflation today can spread the losses over time. Over time, as the debt increases, more revenue has to be raised. Interest rates increase. The time path of inflation depends on whether the monetary authority can “inflate away” part of the debt. If this default is costly, the end of the transfer period is associated with permanently lower inflation. If a sudden increase in the price level (default) is an option (and if it chooses to be exercised), the end of the transfer period is associated with high (and brief) inflation and then stabilization.
    Keywords: optimal monetary policy; inflation; fiscal dominance
    JEL: E5 E6
    Date: 2025–04–02
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:fip:fedlwp:99980
  11. By: Mitsuru Katagiri (Associate Professor, Faculty of Business Administration, Hosei University (E-mail:mitsuru.katagiri@hosei.ac.jp)); Yusuke Oh (Deputy Director, Institute for Monetary and Economic Studies, Bank of Japan (E-mail: yuusuke.ou@boj.or.jp)); Yasutaka Ogawa (Director, Financial System and Bank Examination Department, Bank of Japan (E-mail: yasutaka.ogawa@boj.or.jp)); Nao Sudo (Associate Director-General, Financial System and Bank Examination Department, Bank of Japan (E-mail: nao.sudo@boj.or.jp)); Takeki Sunakawa (Associate Professor, Faculty of Economics, Hitotsubashi University (E-mail: t.sunakawa@r.hit-u.ac.jp))
    Abstract: In macroeconomics, fiscal and monetary policies are both viewed as important macro policy tools for stabilizing aggregate demand, and their transmission channels and effects are considered to interact with each other. By adjusting interest rates, monetary policy can affect the extent to which the intertemporal substitution of aggregate demand occurs and thus alter the size of fiscal multipliers. These adjustments can also impact government debt accumulation through changes in interest payments. Conversely, fiscal policy and resulting government debt levels, just like other economic and social environments, can influence the transmission and impact of monetary policy by affecting the decision- making of households and firms. In addition, some theories posit that primary fiscal balance dynamics themselves impact the determination of the aggregate price level. Academic interest in the interaction of the two policies has intensified, sparked by debates on how stimulative policies should be executed in response to the global financial crisis and inflation surges after the COVID-19 pandemic. This paper overviews recent macroeconomic studies on monetary and fiscal policy interactions mainly from three perspectives: the Taylor rule and fiscal multipliers, interest rates and government debt, and the fiscal theory of the price level.
    Keywords: Taylor rule, fiscal multipliers, interest rates and government debt, fiscal theory of the price level
    JEL: E12 E21 E31 E52 E62
    Date: 2024–10
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ime:imedps:24-e-12
  12. By: van 't Klooster, Jens
    Abstract: The ECB's strategy is under review, and rightly so. Recent inflation shocks have exposed weaknesses in the ECB's current approach. It focuses too narrowly on medium-term inflation expectations and relies almost exclusively on interest rate adjustments. The strategy is blind to structural inflation risks. Supply-side disruptions, corporate pricing power, and climate-related shocks were key drivers of the 2022-23 inflation surge, yet these risks lie outside the ECB's analytical framework and time horizon. Rate hikes alone are a blunt and costly tool. The ECB's reactive approach left it with few options beyond raising rates, which did little to curb cost-push inflation at the source and risked undermining investment in long-term resilience, especially in clean energy. The ECB's framework can be updated. Though mindful of 1970s-style inflation and inspired by the Bundesbank's success in fighting it, the drafters of the ECB mandate recognised the uniqueness of these circumstances and deliberately gave the central bank the flexibility to adapt to new economic challenges. The 2025 review is a chance to do so. The ECB must equip itself to detect and address structural risks before they materialise - and coordinate more effectively with other EU policy tools to preserve price stability in turbulent times. This report makes three policy recommendations: 1. Broaden the time horizon of the ECB's strategy to include the long-term preconditions for price stability. 2. Create a third analytical pillar dedicated to long-term risks, including climate change, energy dependence, demographics, market power and geopolitical disruptions. 3. Embed monetary policy in a wider EU inflation governance framework that supports strategic coordination with fiscal, industrial and competition policies.
    Keywords: Monetarypolicy, Inflation, ECB
    Date: 2025
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:zbw:dzimps:317066
  13. By: António Afonso; Jorge Braga Ferreira
    Abstract: We assess how countries’ fiscal policies during COVID-19 pandemic influenced the effects of the Pandemic Emergency Purchase Programme (PEPP) on sovereign bond Option-Adjusted Spreads. Using a cross-sectional regression model with country and time-fixed effects, we analyse a sample of 1, 368 euro-denominated sovereign bonds issued between Q1:2018 and Q1:2022 in 19 Eurozone countries. We consider the PEPP net purchases by country, and the fiscal policy is measured through changes in debt-to-GDP ratio and net lending/borrowing as a percentage of GDP. The results indicate that PEPP’s effectiveness in reducing spreads was strongly conditional on fiscal conditions, and then fiscal fundamentals condition the effectiveness of ECB interventions. In high-debt countries, PEPP did not lower spreads, which suggests that fiscal concerns remained dominant. PEPP was more effective in low-debt countries, but its effects diminished as the level of debt increased, which suggest rising fiscal risks. Furthermore, eligibility status was more important in economies with low debt levels, where eligible bonds were seen as riskier assets. Finally, the results suggests that PEPP’s effectiveness was stronger for higher-rated bonds, longer-maturity bonds, and central government bonds, in fiscally sound countries.
    Keywords: ECB, PEPP, unconventional monetary policy, fiscal policy, sovereign bond yields, COVID-19 pandemic.
    JEL: C23 E52 E58 E62 G12
    Date: 2025–05
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ise:remwps:wp03782025
  14. By: Vera Baye (University of Osnabrueck); Valeriya Dinger (University of Osnabrueck and Leeds University Business Schoo)
    Abstract: We empirically document deviations of residential real estate prices from fundamental values at the micro level and investigate their relationship with local bank lending growth during a period of unconventional monetary policy. Our findings indicate a positive relationship between credit growth and excessive price increases in real estate markets, with interest rate reductions further amplifying these credit-driven price distortions. Additionally, we provide evidence that banks' search-for-yield behavior explains the increase in lending, particularly among deposit-funded banks that experienced a squeeze of margins during the negative monetary policy rate period. This credit expansion, in turn, directly influences the real economy by fueling local housing markets. In our analysis, we exploit that the introduction of negative monetary policy rates affected banks differently depending on their ex-ante liquidity and relate micro-level real estate data to balance sheet information from locally operating banks and macroeconomic variables.
    Keywords: residential real estate prices, housing bubbles, bank lending, search-for-yield, micro data, negative interest rates
    JEL: E44 E52 G21 R21 R31
    Date: 2025–05–08
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:iee:wpaper:wp0126
  15. By: Breckenfelder, Johannes; Schepens, Glenn
    Abstract: Central banks increasingly act as market-makers-of-last-resort, yet the impact and exit of such interventions remain poorly understood. Using euro-area data, we analyze the cycle of market freeze, intervention, and exit in short-term debt markets. A run on money market funds (MMFs) triggered a collapse in these markets in March 2020. Firms replaced only 27% of lost funding through credit lines. The European Central Bank intervened, fully replacing MMFs for some firms and allowing them to issue more debt at lower rates and longer maturities. After the ECB’s exit, more-exposed firms faced higher yields (+20.2 bps), reduced MMF investments, and fewer new relationships. Credit line take-up did not materially change post-exit. JEL Classification: G11, G23, G32, E5
    Keywords: central bank intervention, commercial paper, exit, market-maker-of-last resort, money market funds, short-term corporate debt
    Date: 2025–05
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ecb:ecbwps:20253055
  16. By: Boddin , Dominik (Deutsche Bundesbank); te Kaat, Daniel Marcel (University of Groningen); Roszbach , Kasper (Norges Bank)
    Abstract: This paper provides novel microlevel evidence that cross-border bank flows are an important means for households to access credit, not only in emerging markets but also in advanced economies. Using supervisory bank-level data alongside household credit and consumption data from Germany, we study how lending to households was impacted by the influx of cross-border bank funding following the European Central Bank’s implementation of nonconventional monetary policy in 2014 and 2015. Regional banks that were highly exposed to fluctuations in foreign capital inflows increased consumer lending to riskier, lower-income households by 50% more than other banks. Rising deposit inflows from non-euro area banks induced less-capitalized banks to expand their lending on the extensive margin. The analysis concludes that Improved access to credit enables lower-income customers of exposed banks to increase nondurable consumer spending. Data from a larger group of euro area countries confirm that conclusion.
    Keywords: cross-border bank flows; households; bank lending; risk-taking; credit booms; funding shocks
    JEL: F30 G20 G50
    Date: 2025–05–09
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ris:adbewp:0779
  17. By: Andrian, Leandro Gaston; Leon-Diaz, John; Rojas, Eugenio
    Abstract: We examine hedging as a macroprudential tool in a Sudden Stops model of an economy exposed to commodity price fluctuations. We find that hedging commodity revenues yields significant welfare gains by stabilizing public expenditure, which heavily depends on these revenues. However, this added stability weakens precautionary motives and exacerbates the pecuniary externality that drives overborrowing in such models. As a result, hedging and traditional macroprudential policy act as complements rather than substitutes, with more ag- gressive hedging inducing a stronger macroprudential response. Our findings suggest that while hedging enhances stability and improves welfare, it does not eliminate the need for macroprudential regulation.
    Keywords: Hedging;Sudden stops;Financial Crises;Macroprudential policy
    JEL: F32 F41 G13
    Date: 2025–04
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:idb:brikps:14083
  18. By: Ndwiga, David; Makunda, Geraldine
    Abstract: The study investigates the effects of macro imbalances on the banking sector performance in Kenya from the financial intermediation cost perspective for 2020q4 - 2024q1 period. Employing dynamic panel GMM model, the study finds that inflation pressures above the upper bound target, external debt unsustainability, monetary policy tightening and current account deficit to GDP ratio lead to increase in the intermediation cost. The findings call for need to anchor the inflation rate below the upper bound target, exercise prudence fiscal measures, effective application of the monetary policy instruments and development of a matrix of interlinkages between the macro imbalances.
    Date: 2025
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:zbw:kbawps:316419
  19. By: Dräger, Lena; Gründler, Klaus; Potrafke, Niklas
    Abstract: Social interactions affect individual behavior in a variety of ways, but their effects on expectation formation are less well understood. We design a large-scale global survey experiment among renowned experts working in 135 countries to study whether peer effects impact expectations about the macroeconomy. The global setting allows us to exploit rich cross-national variation in macroeconomic fundamentals. Our experiment uncovers sizable effects of peers and shows that peer information also shifts monetary policy recommendations of experts. The results have important implications for the design of policies and models of information acquisition.
    Keywords: Inflation expectations; belief formation; peer effects; survey experiment; economic experts
    JEL: E31 E71 D84
    Date: 2025–05
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:han:dpaper:dp-739
  20. By: Piyali Das; Chetan Ghate; Subhadeep Halder
    Abstract: We develop a dynamic model of monetary-fiscal interactions and government debt. We introduce a novel channel of fiscal dominance through the maturity structure. Faced with an expansionary fiscal policy shock, extending debt-maturity under fiscal dominance becomes a strategic tool for maintaining debt sustainability without immediate price-level adjustments by the monetary authority. We show that extending the maturity of debt raises the interest burden of debt. To validate the results empirically, we assemble a novel central government security level dataset between 1999-2022 for India. We find that the probability of issuing a long-term security is approximately 7 percentage points higher in a fiscal dominant regime compared to a monetary dominant regime. Using the approach in Hall and Sargent (2011) for debt-decomposition, we show that the nominal return on marketable and non-marketable debt is the largest component driving public debt increases in periods of fiscal dominance between 1999-2022. Our paper highlights the ’maturity-structure’ channel of fiscal dominance, and provides a framework to quantify the impact of fiscal dominance on the interest-rate burden of sovereign debt in a large emerging market economy.
    Keywords: debt decomposition, fiscal dominance, monetary-fiscal interactions, macroeconomic stabilization
    JEL: E43 E61 E63 E65 H63 O23
    Date: 2025–05
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:een:camaaa:2025-29
  21. By: Ed Cornforth; Lea de greef; Patricia Sánchez Juanino
    Abstract: This paper explores the sensitivity of the macroeconomic impacts of climate change scenarios to underlying assumptions about the policy environment and agent responses. Using the National Institute Global Econometric Model (NiGEM), we analyse the Net Zero long-term scenario developed by the Network for Greening the Financial System (NGFS) modifying the different assumptions related to agent expectations, monetary policy reactions, and fiscal recycling mechanisms. We assess how these options influence the economic outcomes of the transition to net zero.
    Keywords: NiGEM, macroeconomic model, expectations, net zero scenario, NGFS, monetary policy, fiscal policy
    JEL: E70 E17 Q54
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:nsr:niesrd:567
  22. By: Efrem Castelnuovo; Giovanni Pellegrino; Laust L. Særkjær
    Abstract: We study how uncertainty shocks affect the macroeconomy across the inflation cycle using a nonlinear stochastic volatility-in-mean VAR. When inflation is high, uncertainty shocks raise inflation and depress real activity more sharply. A non-linear New Keynesian model with second-moment shocks and trend inflation explains this via an 'inflation-uncertainty amplifier': the interaction between high trend inflation and firms' upward price bias magnifies the effects of uncertainty by increasing price dispersion. An aggressive policy response can replicate the allocation achieved under standard policy when trend inflation is low.
    Keywords: uncertainty, trend inflation, nonlinear VAR model, new Keynesian model, monetary policy.
    JEL: C32 E32 E44 G01
    Date: 2025
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ces:ceswps:_11853
  23. By: Zakaria Savon (Ph.D., Faculty of Legal, Economic and Social Sciences - Souissi, Mohammed V University, Rabat)
    Abstract: Islamic banking plays a critical role in mobilizing funds for the economy. The financing mechanisms used by Islamic banks are largely influenced by macroeconomic conditions due to their asset-backed nature. A substantial portion of the assets held by these banks originates from debt financing methods, including Murabahah and Ijarah. However, Islamic financial institutions are exposed to various risks, particularly financing or credit risks. This type of risk pertains to the potential financial losses that banks may encounter when a borrower fails to meet their obligations. The non-performing financing (NPF) rate serves as a key indicator for assessing this risk. Our study investigates the impact of key macroeconomic variables and monetary policy on the nonperforming financing rate of Islamic banks in Jordan. The analysis employs an autoregressive distributed lag (ARDL) model, utilizing data from the fourth quarter of 2013 through the first quarter of 2022. The results indicate that both monetary policy and economic growth significantly influence the non-performing financing rates of Islamic banks in Jordan.
    Keywords: Islamic banks, Credit-risk, Macroeconomics, Monetary policy, ARDL, JORDAN
    Date: 2025–02
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:hal:journl:hal-05011821
  24. By: Aurélien Goutsmedt (F.R.S.-FNRS, UCLouvain, ISPOLE, ICHEC - Brussels Management School [Bruxelles]); Francesco Sergi (LIPHA - Laboratoire Interdisciplinaire d'étude du Politique Hannah Arendt Paris-Est - UPEC UP12 - Université Paris-Est Créteil Val-de-Marne - Paris 12 - Université Gustave Eiffel, UPEC UP12 - Université Paris-Est Créteil Val-de-Marne - Paris 12); François Claveau (UdeS - Université de Sherbrooke, CIRST - Centre interuniversitaire de recherche sur la science et la technologie - UdeM - Université de Montréal - UQAM - Université du Québec à Montréal = University of Québec in Montréal); Clément Fontan (UCLouvain, ISPOLE)
    Abstract: This article investigates the scientization process in central banks, using the Bank of England (BoE) as a case study. Its main goal is to clarify the interactions and tensions among three dimensions of scientization: contributory, policymaking and legitimizing. To do so, we outline an ideal type of contributory scientization in central banks, whereby they become active contributors to science. The article derives empirically observable characteristics for this ideal type, regarding leadership and staff profiles, use of internal resources, composition of external networks, and publication and discursive outputs. The BoE is then contrasted to this ideal type of a central bank thoroughly involved in contributory scientization. The empirical material includes archives and interviews as well as three databases providing quantitative information from the 1970s to 2019. We find that the development of contributory scientization is strategically motivated, often generating tensions with policymaking and legitimizing dimensions. Our findings suggest that scientization in central banks is best understood as a three-dimensional, non-linear process, rather than a steamroller.
    Abstract: Cet article étudie le processus de scientificisation dans les banques centrales, en utilisant la Banque d'Angleterre (BoE) comme étude de cas. Il propose un idéal-type de banque centrale scientifique, qui est lié à l'idée centrale selon laquelle la scientificité d'une organisation augmente avec sa volonté de contribuer à la science pertinente. Nous dérivons de cet idéal-type des caractéristiques empiriquement observables concernant les profils des dirigeants et du personnel, l'utilisation des ressources internes, la composition des réseaux externes et les résultats des publications et des discours. La BoE est ensuite comparée à cet idéal-type d'une banque centrale entièrement scientifique. Le matériel empirique comprend des archives et des entretiens ainsi que trois bases de données fournissant des informations quantitatives de 1980 à 2019. Nous constatons que le chemin vers la scientificisation est stratégiquement motivé et varié, influencé par des facteurs tels que l'équilibre entre les impératifs de crédibilité des experts et l'information des décideurs politiques. Sur la base de cette analyse empirique, nous soulignons les multiples facettes de la dynamique du processus de scientifisation et appelons à des représentations plus nuancées dans la littérature académique.
    Keywords: Central bank, Scientisation, Expertise, Depoliticisation, Word embedding
    Date: 2025–04–22
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:hal:journl:hal-04267004

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