U.S. Monetary Policy Spillovers to Emerging Markets: Both Shocks and Vulnerabilities Matter

Shaghil Ahmed, Ozge Akinci, A. Queraltó
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引用次数: 11

Abstract

Using a macroeconomic model, we explore how sources of shocks and vulnerabilities matter for the transmission of U.S. monetary changes to emerging market economies (EMEs). We utilize a calibrated two-country New Keynesian model with financial frictions, partly-dollarized balance sheets, and imperfectly anchored inflation expectations. Contrary to other recent studies that also emphasize the sources of shocks, our approach allows the quantification of effects on real macroeconomic variables as well, in addition to financial spillovers. Moreover, we model the most relevant vulnerabilities structurally. We show that higher U.S. interest rates arising from stronger U.S. aggregate demand generate modestly positive spillovers to economic activity in EMEs with stronger fundamentals, but can be adverse for vulnerable EMEs. In contrast, U.S. monetary tightenings driven by a more-hawkish policy stance cause a substantial slowdown in activity in all EMEs. Our model also captures the challenging policy tradeos that EME central banks face. We show that these tradeoffs are more favorable when inflation expectations are well anchored.
美国货币政策对新兴市场的溢出效应:冲击和脆弱性都很重要
使用宏观经济模型,我们探讨了冲击和脆弱性的来源如何影响美国货币变化向新兴市场经济体(eme)的传导。我们使用了一个经过校准的两国新凯恩斯模型,该模型包含金融摩擦、部分美元化的资产负债表和不完全锚定的通胀预期。与最近其他强调冲击来源的研究相反,除了金融溢出效应之外,我们的方法还允许对实际宏观经济变量的影响进行量化。此外,我们在结构上对最相关的漏洞进行建模。我们表明,美国总需求走强导致的美国利率上升,对基本面较强的新兴市场经济体的经济活动产生了适度的积极溢出效应,但对脆弱的新兴市场经济体来说可能是不利的。相比之下,美国在更强硬的政策立场推动下收紧货币政策,导致所有新兴市场国家的经济活动大幅放缓。我们的模型还捕捉到了EME央行面临的具有挑战性的政策交易。我们表明,当通胀预期得到很好的锚定时,这些权衡更为有利。
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