{"title":"Evaluating capital flow management measures used as macro-prudential tools","authors":"A. Blundell-Wignall, Caroline Roulet","doi":"10.1787/FMT-2015-5JM0P44DLQ6F","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Earlier OECD research has shown that capital flow management measures (CFMs) that are used as macro-prudential measures (MPMs), including currency-based restrictions applied to banks’ operations also with non-residents, have the intended negative impact on capital account openness as measured by covered interest parity indicators. But what is their impact as macro-prudential tools to improve resilience to financial stability risks? This paper refers to the Bruno and Shin (2013) study that suggests that currency-based restrictions act as an effective macro-prudential buffer by reducing the sensitivity in emerging economies of cross-border bank lending to global credit cycles as measured by the volatility index VIX. The specific restrictions considered by the Bruno and Shin study are defined as CFMs and MPMs by both the IMF and the OECD. The paper shows that this result is mitigated when using updated data and testing the same hypotheses for more countries. Therefore further research is needed before concluding on the effectiveness of CFMs used as MPMs. On the other hand, the paper does find that CFMs, including currency-based measures, play a role in managing the domestic credit implications of those central banks engaged in foreign exchange interventions. The paper suggests that countries concerned with financial stability risks that may arise from global credit push factors, while wishing to avoid price distortions caused by CFMs, could use Basel III-consistent liquidity coverage ratios and net stable funding ratios as alternatives to CFMs; they also have the advantage of not having raised objections between governments so far regarding international commitments to exchange rate flexibility and cross-border openness, including the OECD Code of Liberalisation of Capital Movements.","PeriodicalId":444795,"journal":{"name":"Oecd Journal: Financial Market Trends","volume":"27(2) 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2016-04-25","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"4","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Oecd Journal: Financial Market Trends","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1787/FMT-2015-5JM0P44DLQ6F","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 4
Abstract
Earlier OECD research has shown that capital flow management measures (CFMs) that are used as macro-prudential measures (MPMs), including currency-based restrictions applied to banks’ operations also with non-residents, have the intended negative impact on capital account openness as measured by covered interest parity indicators. But what is their impact as macro-prudential tools to improve resilience to financial stability risks? This paper refers to the Bruno and Shin (2013) study that suggests that currency-based restrictions act as an effective macro-prudential buffer by reducing the sensitivity in emerging economies of cross-border bank lending to global credit cycles as measured by the volatility index VIX. The specific restrictions considered by the Bruno and Shin study are defined as CFMs and MPMs by both the IMF and the OECD. The paper shows that this result is mitigated when using updated data and testing the same hypotheses for more countries. Therefore further research is needed before concluding on the effectiveness of CFMs used as MPMs. On the other hand, the paper does find that CFMs, including currency-based measures, play a role in managing the domestic credit implications of those central banks engaged in foreign exchange interventions. The paper suggests that countries concerned with financial stability risks that may arise from global credit push factors, while wishing to avoid price distortions caused by CFMs, could use Basel III-consistent liquidity coverage ratios and net stable funding ratios as alternatives to CFMs; they also have the advantage of not having raised objections between governments so far regarding international commitments to exchange rate flexibility and cross-border openness, including the OECD Code of Liberalisation of Capital Movements.
经合组织早期的研究表明,作为宏观审慎措施(mpm)的资本流动管理措施(cfm),包括适用于银行业务的基于货币的限制,也适用于非居民,通过覆盖利率平价指标衡量,对资本账户开放产生了预期的负面影响。但作为宏观审慎工具,它们对提高抵御金融稳定风险的能力有何影响?本文引用了Bruno和Shin(2013)的研究,该研究表明,基于货币的限制通过降低新兴经济体跨境银行贷款对波动率指数VIX衡量的全球信贷周期的敏感性,起到了有效的宏观审慎缓冲作用。Bruno和Shin研究中考虑的具体限制被IMF和OECD定义为cfm和mpm。本文表明,当使用更新的数据并在更多的国家测试相同的假设时,这一结果得到了缓解。因此,在得出cfm作为mpm的有效性结论之前,还需要进一步的研究。另一方面,本文确实发现cfm,包括基于货币的措施,在管理参与外汇干预的中央银行的国内信贷影响方面发挥了作用。本文建议,关注全球信贷推动因素可能产生的金融稳定风险的国家,在希望避免cfm造成的价格扭曲的同时,可以使用符合巴塞尔协议iii的流动性覆盖率和净稳定融资比率作为cfm的替代方案;它们的另一个优势是,迄今为止还没有引起各国政府对汇率灵活性和跨境开放的国际承诺(包括经合组织(OECD)的《资本流动自由化准则》(Code of liberal of Capital Movements)的反对。