nep-mon New Economics Papers
on Monetary Economics
Issue of 2024‒10‒07
24 papers chosen by
Bernd Hayo, Philipps-Universität Marburg


  1. Shocking the Economy from 1967 up to 2023: Reinforcing the Relevance of Divisia Money in US Monetary Policy By Alain Paquet; Christophe Barrette
  2. The transmission of monetary policy to credit supply in the euro area By Miguel García-Posada; Peter Paz
  3. An unconventional FX tail risk story By Cañon, Carlos; Gerba, Eddie; Pambira, Alberto; Stoja, Evarist
  4. Wartime Interest Rate Pass-Through in Ukraine: The Role of Prudential Indicators By Anton Grui
  5. Inflation Dynamics in OECD Economies: The Role of Crude Oil Import Price, Unconventional Monetary Policy, and Post-Pandemic Demand Shocks By Philemon Kwame Opoku
  6. Understanding Firm Dynamics with Daily Data By Lukas Hack; Davud Rostam-Afschar
  7. Household Food Inflation in Canada By Olena Kostyshyna; Maude Ouellet
  8. The Resilience of Central, Eastern and Southeastern Europe (CESEE) Countries During ECB’s Monetary Cycles By Joshua Aizenman; Jamel Saadaoui
  9. Monetary Policy in Uncertain Times By Simon C. Smith; Allan Timmermann; Jonathan H. Wright
  10. Quantitative Easing and the Supply of Safe Assets: Evidence from International Bond Safety Premia By Christensen, Jens H. E.; Mirkov, Nikola; Zhang, Xin
  11. Ecosystem Models for a Central Bank Digital Currency: Analysis Framework and Potential Models By Youming Liu; Francisco Rivadeneyra; Edona Reshidi; Oleksandr Shcherbakov; André Stenzel
  12. Monetary policy and inequality: an heterogenous agents’ approach. By Andrea Boitani; Lorenzo Di Domenico; Giorgio Ricchiuti
  13. The effects of macro uncertainty shocks in the euro area: A FAVAR approachAverage Inflation Targeting: How far to look into the past and the future? By Carlos Canizares Martinez; Arne Gieseck
  14. House price responses to monetary policy surprises: evidence from US listings data By Denis Gorea; Oleksiy Kryvtsov; Marianna Kudlyak
  15. Rate Cycles By Forbes, Kristin; Ha, Jongrim; Kose, M. Ayhan
  16. PHigh Voltage: Financing the Path to Zero Coal By Cristina Jude; Grégory Levieuge
  17. Informal Economy Rate and Largest Banknote Denomination By Vatansever, Berra
  18. Invoice Currency Choice and its Determinants in Japanese Trade: New Evidence from Japanese Customs Data By Junko Shimizu; Kiyotaka Sato; Takatoshi Ito; Yushi Yoshida; Taiyo Yoshimi; Uraku Yoshimoto
  19. Invoicing Currency and Exchange Rate Pass-Through in Japanese Imports: A Panel VAR Analysis By Taiyo Yoshimi; Uraku Yoshimoto; Takatoshi Ito; Kiyotaka Sato; Junko Shimizu; Yushi Yoshida
  20. Exchange rate overshooting: unraveling the puzzles By Miriam Braig; Sebastian K. Rüth; Wouter Van der Veken
  21. Corporate Finance and Interest Rate Policy By Piergallini, Alessandro
  22. Digital Innovations for Increasing Financial Inclusion: CBDC, Cryptocurrency, Embedded finance, Artificial Intelligence, WaaS, Fintech, Bigtech, and DeFi By Ozili, Peterson K
  23. Failing Banks By Sergio A. Correia; Stephan Luck; Emil Verner
  24. Inflation Forecasting in Turbulent Times By Martin, Ertl; Fortin, Ines; Hlouskova, Jaroslava; Koch, Sebastian P.; Kunst, Robert M.; Sögner, Leopold

  1. By: Alain Paquet (University of Quebec in Montreal); Christophe Barrette (University of Quebec in Montreal)
    Abstract: Using US quarterly data from 1967 to 2023, which includes the surge and subsequent decline in inflation following the pandemic, as well as the significant expansionary monetary policy from quantitative easing preceding a renewed focus on bringing inflation back to the 2% target, we resort to both traditional and new econometric tools to assess the stability of the sign and size of key macroeconomic variables’ responses to monetary shocks. Our results reinforce and confirm the importance of a broad Divisia measure for understanding monetary policy transmission and making informed policy decisions. In particular, the overall shape of the price responses to a Divisia-based monetary shock is particularly consistent throughout the entire sample. Monetary policy shocks from the fed funds rate or shadow policy interest rate alone fail to produce responses free from empirical puzzles and consistent with expected intuition, for both earlier and extended sample periods. In contrast, Divisia measures generate IRFs that are puzzle-free and align with economic theory and intuition. They are empirically relevant in explaining output and price dynamics from the late 60s to today.
    Keywords: Monetary policy shock, Divisia monetary aggregates, SVAR, Time-Varying Parameter Structural VAR, output and price level
    JEL: E5 E51 E52 E3 E31 E32
    Date: 2024–09
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:bbh:wpaper:24-04
  2. By: Miguel García-Posada (BANCO DE ESPAÑA); Peter Paz (BANCO DE ESPAÑA)
    Abstract: We present empirical evidence on the transmission of monetary policy to banks’ credit standards (i.e. loan approval criteria) in loans granted to non-financial corporations (NFCs) in the euro area. To this end, we use a confidential survey in which banks are asked about developments in their respective credit markets, coupled with banks’ balance sheets and high-frequency monetary policy shocks. First, we find that poorly capitalized banks are more likely to tighten their credit standards in loans to NFCs. Second, these banks have tended to tighten their credit standards more in loans to SMEs than in loans to large firms during the current restrictive monetary phase. Third, the transmission of monetary policy to credit standards in loans to NFCs is stronger in poorly capitalized banks. Fourth, the relationship between monetary policy and credit standards is driven by large contractionary monetary policy shocks, which reveals important asymmetries in the bank lending channel. Finally, a tightening of the monetary policy stance also increases rejection rates in loans to NFCs, to a greater extent in poorly capitalized banks.
    Keywords: monetary policy, bank capital, credit supply, bank lending channel
    JEL: E51 E52 G21
    Date: 2024–09
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:bde:wpaper:2430
  3. By: Cañon, Carlos; Gerba, Eddie; Pambira, Alberto; Stoja, Evarist
    Abstract: We examine how the tail risk of currency returns over the past 20 years were impacted by central bank monetary and liquidity measures across the globe with an original and unique dataset that we make publicly available. Using a standard factor model, we derive theoretical measures of tail risks of currency returns which we then relate to the various policy instruments employed by central banks. We find empirical evidence for the existence of a cross-border transmission channel of central bank policy through the FX market. The tail impact is particularly sizeable for asset purchases and swap lines. The effects last for up to 1 month, and are proportionally higher for joint QE actions. This cross-border source of tail risk is largely undiversifiable, even after controlling for the U.S. dollar dominance and the effects of its own monetary policy stance.
    Keywords: currency tail risk; liquidity measures; systematic and idiosyncratic components of tail risk; unconventional and conventional monetary policy
    JEL: F3 G3 J1
    Date: 2024–10
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ehl:lserod:125291
  4. By: Anton Grui (Charles University, National Bank of Ukraine)
    Abstract: In this paper, I study Ukraine´s heterogeneous and time-variant pass-through from the money market interest rate to bank deposit and lending rates. I utilize a new panel dataset containing individual banks´ characteristics and prudential indicators over 2019-2023, a period comprising the full-scale Russian invasion. First, using TVPARDL models, I reveal that during the invasion, the pass-through diminished for all examined bank products. It is also weaker to deposits in times of monetary policy tightening. Second, using panel regressions, I show how banks´ characteristics and prudential indicators influence the transmission. Their impacts are asymmetric during monetary policy tightening and loosening. Overall, I track wartime interest rate pass-through for practical monetary policy purposes and contribute to the topic of interactions between monetary and prudential policies.
    Keywords: monetary policy transmission mechanism, interest rate pass-through, wartime economy
    JEL: C54 E43 E52 G21
    Date: 2024–09
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:fau:wpaper:wp2024_33
  5. By: Philemon Kwame Opoku
    Abstract: This paper examines the impact on inflation of crude oil import price (COIP), unconventional monetary policy (UMP), and post-pandemic demand shocks for a panel of 21 OECD countries, using panel vector autoregressive (pVAR) and local projection methods. The empirical result provides evidence that COIP shocks significantly contribute to increases in consumer price index (CPI) inflation, GDP deflator inflation and producer price index (PPI) inflation. UMP shocks, although less impactful than COIP shocks, also influence inflation. Furthermore, the most significant inflationary pressures in recent times have arisen from post-pandemic demand shocks, surpassing the effects of COIP and UMP shocks in the post-COIVD period. The findings highlight the critical role of supply-side and demand-side factors in shaping inflation dynamics in the OECD. Keywords: Unconventional Monetary Policy (UMP), Crude Oil Import Price (COIP), Post-pandemic demand Shock, Inflation, panel VARs, Local Projections
    Date: 2024–09
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ise:remwps:wp03412024
  6. By: Lukas Hack; Davud Rostam-Afschar
    Abstract: How do firms respond to macroeconomic shocks? To study this question, we construct novel daily time series that measure firms’ plans and expectations based on surveys from Germany. Daily variation allows us to estimate the short-run aggregate responses of firms in short samples. This allows us to analyze the post-pandemic inflation surge without relying on pre-pandemic data. We find that firms’ plans, notably price-setting plans, respond within days to oil supply and monetary policy shocks but not to forward guidance shocks. The effects are especially strong for small and non-tradeable sector firms. Finally, expectations respond strongly and swiftly, but only to monetary policy.
    Keywords: Daily data, firms, monetary policy, oil supply, inflation surge
    JEL: E31 E43 E52 E58 C83
    Date: 2024–09
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:bon:boncrc:crctr224_2024_593
  7. By: Olena Kostyshyna; Maude Ouellet
    Abstract: We use Canadian home scanner data to study household food inflation rates during periods of low and high inflation. We find that during the post-pandemic surge in inflation, the actual inflation rates experienced by different households varied more widely. Low-income households faced higher inflation than high-income households. We find that during the high-inflation period, households used several strategies to lower the impact of inflation, including shopping more frequently, shopping at more stores or buying more on sale. Canadian households also substituted more toward low-priced products when inflation increased.
    Keywords: Inflation and prices
    JEL: E21 E30 E31 L81
    Date: 2024–09
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:bca:bocawp:24-33
  8. By: Joshua Aizenman; Jamel Saadaoui
    Abstract: We investigate the resilience of CESEE countries during ECB monetary cycles after the entrance of ten countries to the EU in 2004. Undeniably, these countries have experienced a ‘miracle’ growth during the 2000s decade. However, several obstacles appeared following the global financial crisis and the euro crisis. In many CESEE countries, the quality of institutions has stalled, or even worse, has known a deterioration. Our investigation examines how fundamental and institutional variables influence cross-country resilience regarding exchange rates, interest rates, stock prices, inflation, and growth during the subsequent monetary cycles. Specifically, we focus on five ECB tightening and easing cycles observed during 2005-2023. Cross-sectional regressions reveal that limiting inflation, active management of precautionary buffers of international reserves, current account surpluses, better financial development, and institution quality are important predictors of resilience in the next cycle. The panel regressions show that the US shadow rate strongly influences resilience during the ECB monetary cycles. Besides, various asymmetries are discovered for current account balances, international reserves, and fuel import shares during tightening cycles. Panel quantile regressions detect asymmetries along the distribution of the dependent variables for financial development, central bank independence, and the inflation rate preceding the cycles. These findings may provide guidelines that are useful for returning to the trajectory observed before the euro crisis by identifying the main fundamental and institutional variables that enhance the resilience of CESEE.
    JEL: E50 F32 F36 F42 F65
    Date: 2024–09
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:nbr:nberwo:32957
  9. By: Simon C. Smith; Allan Timmermann; Jonathan H. Wright
    Abstract: We investigate the effect of uncertainty surrounding the slope of the Phillips curve on optimal monetary policy. To do this, we first account for parameter uncertainty in a time-invariant Bayesian Phillips curve model. Second, we generalize this model to allow for instabilities in the form of breaks. In both the United States (US) and the European Union (EU), we identify a break around the turn of the century, after which the Phillips curve flattened. Finally, we show how breaks amplify uncertainty in the Phillips curve model, significantly impacting optimal monetary policy. Accounting for breaks causes policymakers to respond more cautiously to deviations in the unemployment rate from its natural rate – as they are less certain about the impact of economic slack on inflation – but to compensate for this increased caution by responding more aggressively to deviations of inflation from its target. Our estimates provide a lower bound for the magnitude of the impact of breaks on the change in responsiveness of optimal monetary policy since they are based on the full sample of data, while policymakers face additional uncertainty as they must continuously determine in real time whether a break has occurred.
    Date: 2024–08–30
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:fip:fedgfn:2024-08-30-1
  10. By: Christensen, Jens H. E. (Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco); Mirkov, Nikola (Belgrade Banking Academy); Zhang, Xin (Research Department, Central Bank of Sweden)
    Abstract: Through large-scale asset purchases, widely known as quantitative easing (QE), central banks around the world have affected the supply of safe assets by buying quasi-safe bonds in exchange for truly safe reserves. We examine the pricing effects of the European Central Bank’s bond purchases in the 2015-2021 period on an international panel of bond safety premia from four highly rated countries: Denmark, Germany, Sweden, and Switzerland. We find statistically significant negative effects for all four countries. This points to an important international spillover channel of QE programs to bond safety premia that operates by increasing the amount of truly safe assets.
    Keywords: term structure modeling; convenience yields; unconventional monetary policy; European Central Bank
    JEL: E43 E47 F42 G12 G13
    Date: 2024–09–01
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:hhs:rbnkwp:0440
  11. By: Youming Liu; Francisco Rivadeneyra; Edona Reshidi; Oleksandr Shcherbakov; André Stenzel
    Abstract: For an intermediated central bank digital currency (CBDC) to be successful, central banks will need to develop sustainable economic models where intermediaries and end users derive value and central banks achieve their policy goals. This note presents a framework for analyzing different economic models of CBDC ecosystems. We analyze the trade-offs of three main CBDC ecosystem models, each with different levels of central bank involvement in activities of the ecosystem and the usage of different policy levers. The policy levers considered in the framework are control over intermediary access to the CBDC network, prices and quality standards. Our analysis suggests that a central bank provision of network infrastructure enables direct control over intermediary access requirements, prices and quality standards upstream. Providing a central bank digital wallet increases development costs but allows the central bank to set quality standards downstream and to promote competition. Delegating the network service to a regulated entity reduces costs for the central bank but may limit its strategic autonomy to control upstream pricing and intermediary access. Our analysis also suggests several areas of future research: central bank pricing models, intermediary revenue models, and quality and privacy standards.
    Keywords: Central bank research; Digital currencies and fintech; Financial services
    JEL: E5 E58 E6 E61 L5
    Date: 2024–09
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:bca:bocadp:24-13
  12. By: Andrea Boitani (Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore; Dipartimento di Economia e Finanza, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore); Lorenzo Di Domenico (Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore; Dipartimento di Economia e Finanza, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore); Giorgio Ricchiuti
    Abstract: In this paper, we study the impact of contractionary monetary policies on income and wealth inequality. By developing an Agent Based – Stock Flow Consistent model, we show that both the sign and magnitude of monetary policy impacts depend on the heterogeneity characterizing income sources across the population, the composition of households wealth and portfolio preferences, the value of the labor share, and the size of unemployment benefits. Monetary policy can affect inequality through four main transmission channels: saving remuneration, asset prices, aggregate demand and cost-push channels. The paper delivers five main results: i) the impact of monetary policy on income inequality is non-linear and is a function of the degree of symmetry in the distribution of firms and bank shares, markup, and unemployment benefits; ii) the magnitude of the impact is not independent of the inequality measure considered; iii) the short-run effects on wealth inequality due to capital gains and losses (CGL) on long-term bonds are positively correlated with the degree of heterogeneity in the portfolio preferences of households. In the long-run, such effect vanishes. The short-run effect is null in the case of zero heterogeneity; iv) If the monetary shock has an asymmetric impact on portfolio decisions, monetary policy can have a long-lasting impact on wealth inequality through the CGLs in the stock market. In the presence of symmetric shocks, CGLs in the stock market have no effect, neither in the short nor in the long term; v) the higher the labor share, the greater the impact of monetary policy on inequality. Finally, we adopt the income factor decomposition to disentangle how income heterogeneity affect the transmission channels of monetary policies.
    Keywords: Monetary policies; income inequality; Agent-Based models; Stock-Flow Consistent models.
    JEL: E4 E52 E53 D31 D63
    Date: 2024–09
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ctc:serie1:def133
  13. By: Carlos Canizares Martinez (National Bank of Slovakia); Arne Gieseck (European Central Bank)
    Abstract: This paper estimates the effects of uncertainty shocks on a large set of economic and financial variables in the euro area. For this purpose, we first build a large monthly macro dataset with euro area-wide data, which we summarize by principal components. Second, we estimate a heteroskedastic factor-augmented vector autoregressive (FAVAR) model using a survey-based measure of macroeconomic uncertainty and a large dataset. Third, we identify five shocks by employing a new identification scheme based on sign restrictions exploiting our large dataset, including uncertainty shocks, financial shocks, standard monetary policy shocks, aggregate demand shocks, and supply shocks. Fourth, we show more than one hundred impulse responses to an uncertainty shock. In this setup, we find that an uncertainty shock has a significantly negative effect on economic activity measures in the euro area, but has no significant effect on savings and inflation. Moreover, uncertainty shocks trigger a contractionary effect on several measures of financial stability. Finally, we discuss the results and possible policy implications
    JEL: C55 D80 D81 E32
    Date: 2024–09
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:svk:wpaper:1109
  14. By: Denis Gorea; Oleksiy Kryvtsov; Marianna Kudlyak
    Abstract: Evidence on the contemporaneous effects of interest rates on house prices has been elusive. We present direct evidence of the high-frequency causal relationship between interest rates and house prices in the United States. We exploit information contained in listings for residential properties for sale in the United States between 2001 and 2019 from the CoreLogic Multiple Listing Service Dataset. Using high-frequency instruments for monetary policy shocks, we estimate that a contractionary monetary policy surprise that raises average 30-year mortgage rates by 0.25 percentage points lowers housing list prices by 1 percent within two weeks. House prices respond to surprises to the expected path of future rates and are insensitive to the federal funds rate surprises. The initial response of list prices is almost entirely passed through to sale prices and persists for at least a year after the announcement.
    Keywords: house prices, monetary policy, transmission of monetary policy, list and sales prices
    JEL: E52 R21 R31
    Date: 2024–09
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:bis:biswps:1212
  15. By: Forbes, Kristin; Ha, Jongrim; Kose, M. Ayhan
    Abstract: This paper analyzes cycles in policy interest rates in 24 advanced economies over 1970–2024, combining a new application of business cycle methodology with rich time-series decompositions of the shocks driving rate movements. “Rate cycles” have gradually evolved over time, with less frequent cyclical turning points, more moderate tightening phases, and a larger role for global shocks. Against this backdrop, the 2020–24 rate cycle has been unprecedented in many dimensions: it features the fastest pivot from active easing to a tightening phase, followed by the most globally synchronized tightening, and an unusually long period of holding rates constant. It also exhibits the largest role for global shocks—with global demand shocks still dominant, but an increased role for global supply shocks in explaining interest rate movements. Inflation and the growth in output and employment have, on average, largely returned to historical norms for this stage in a tightening phase. Any recalibration of interest rates going forward should be gradual, however, and account for the interactions between increasingly important global factors and domestic circumstances, combined with uncertainty as to whether rate cycles have reverted to pre-2008 patterns.
    Keywords: Monetary policy; Oil prices; demand shocks; supply shocks; ECB; Federal Reserve
    JEL: E31 E32 E51 Q43
    Date: 2024–08
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:pra:mprapa:121791
  16. By: Cristina Jude; Grégory Levieuge
    Abstract: At the height of the COVID-19 crisis, many countries have reduced their countercyclical capital buffer (CCyB) and cut key policy rates. We exploit this quasi-natural experiment to gauge the combined effects of these two policies on bank lending rates (BLRs). First, we theoretically show that the joint action of CCyB release and monetary policy easing lowers BLRs by more than the sum of their individual effects. We then empirically confirm this synergy by a difference-in-difference analysis. Notably, for a one percentage point release of the CCyB, corporate BLRs decreased by around 11 basis points more compared to countries without CCyB relief.
    Keywords: Countercyclical Capital Buffer, Monetary Policy, Policy Complementarity, Lending Rates, Covid-19
    JEL: G21 G28 E52 E44
    Date: 2024
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:bfr:banfra:961
  17. By: Vatansever, Berra
    Abstract: The rapidly growing literature on informality has demonstrated its effects on various aspects of countries' economies. This paper aims to build upon the existing literature on banknote denominations and informality by examining the relation between the value of the largest banknote denominations in countries (expressed in US dollars) and their GDP per capita, inflation rate, percentage of people using credit cards, and central bank independence index using cross-country data from 104 countries. This paper uses different methodologies such as plain correlation and least squares regression in order to find the correlation between the aforementioned variables. The results indicate a negative correlation between informal sector size and the value of the largest banknote denomination, suggesting that countries with larger informal sectors tend to have lower-value banknotes. In conclusion, this paper suggests that the informal sector is one of the underlying factors that explain why governments are averse to new larger banknote denominations and how this is related to the correlation between the informal sector percentage and the value of the largest banknote denomination in USD. Adding onto this, the paper also compares and contrasts the results of the observations obtained with the current literature on informality and banknote denominations.
    Keywords: informality; banknote denominations; credit card usage; GDP Per Capita; Inflation Rate
    JEL: E40 O17 O57
    Date: 2024–09–08
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:pra:mprapa:121957
  18. By: Junko Shimizu (Faculty of Economics, Gakushuin University, Japan / Policy Research Institute, Ministry of Finance, Japan); Kiyotaka Sato (Department of Economics, Yokohama National University, Japan / Policy Research Institute, Ministry of Finance, Japan); Takatoshi Ito (School of International and Public Affairs, Columbia University, USA / NBER / National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies, Japan); Yushi Yoshida (Faculty of Economics, Shiga University, Japan / Policy Research Institute, Ministry of Finance, Japan); Taiyo Yoshimi (DFaculty of Economics, Chuo University, Japan / Policy Research Institute, Ministry of Finance, Japan); Uraku Yoshimoto (Policy Research Institute, Ministry of Finance, Japan)
    Abstract: In this study, we use microdata from Japanese customs declarations and calculate semiannual invoice currency shares by country, both on a value and transaction basis. From country-level data, we can confirm the following: First, the impression that Japan’s trade is biased toward the U.S. dollar (USD) is mainly due to choices in the U.S., China, and resource-rich countries with large trade volumes. Second, the yen invoicing is selected on a value basis and an even larger transaction number basis, and the local currency invoicing is also used on a bilateral country basis. Third, the choice of invoice currency has changed in recent years. From 2014 to 2020, the USD lost the most shares, falling in 23 of the 34 countries. By conducting an empirical analysis exploring the determinants of invoice currency, our main findings confirm that the intermediate goods trade share has the effect of reducing Yen and increasing USD invoicing in export, while the higher the inflation gap, the more likely one is to use USD invoicing, which suggests that Japanese firms will be further exposed to foreign exchange risk in the future.
    Keywords: Invoice currency share, Customs data, Trading partner
    JEL: F23 F31 F33
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:mof:wpaper:ron374
  19. By: Taiyo Yoshimi; Uraku Yoshimoto; Takatoshi Ito; Kiyotaka Sato; Junko Shimizu; Yushi Yoshida
    Abstract: This study utilizes the granular Japanese customs data from 2014 to 2020 to examine the exchange rate pass-through (ERPT) to Japanese import prices. It mainly focuses on the impact of the invoicing currency choice on ERPT. The ERPT elasticity in products invoiced in the exporter’s currency is greater than those invoiced in yen. In the full sample analysis, the ERPT elasticity was 0.75 for products invoiced in the exporter’s currency, compared to about 0.19 for yen-invoiced products. We find the same tendency for imports from two Asian powerhouses: China and Thailand. There is no significant difference in the ERPT elasticity between products invoiced in the exporter’s currency and those invoiced in a third currency (i.e., a currency other than yen or the exporter’s currency). In addition, an asymmetric pass-through is found, namely the ERPT during the appreciation phase of the yen is higher than during the depreciation phase. This finding is interpreted that foreign exporters strengthen their pricing-to-market behavior during the yen depreciation phase to maintain their market share.
    JEL: F1 F31 F33 F39
    Date: 2024–09
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:nbr:nberwo:32910
  20. By: Miriam Braig (University of Erfurt); Sebastian K. Rüth (University of Erfurt); Wouter Van der Veken (National Bank of Belgium, Economics and Research Department and Ghent University)
    Abstract: We solve a canonical, estimated, medium-sized, open-economy New Keynesian model, cast it into a small-scale population vector autoregression, and assess whether best-practice structural identifications detect textbook “overshooting” after a monetary policy hike—i.e., an instant real appreciation that monotonically reverts. Our results include “delayed overshooting, ” “exchange rate puzzles, ” “forward discount puzzles, ” and model-consistent overshooting. Identifications that regularly indicate open-economy anomalies in empirics likewise produce them in our controlled setup. Vice versa, identifications that prompt theory-conform conclusions in actual data do so in our experimental data. We infer that less empirical evidence may contradict canonical international macro theory than previously understood.
    Keywords: New open economy macroeconomics, population vector autoregression, invertibility, structural identification, exchange rate, overshooting.
    JEL: C32 E32 E52 F41 F42
    Date: 2024–09
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:nbb:reswpp:202409-455
  21. By: Piergallini, Alessandro
    Abstract: I develop flexible- and sticky-price general equilibrium models that embody corporate financing decisions affecting firm value because of distortionary taxes. Nominal interest-rate variations impact costs of debt and equity capital asymmetrically and induce firms to modify the financial structure, altering the gap between the (optimization-based) weighted average cost of capital and the real interest rate. Under these circumstances, I demonstrate that passive or mildly active monetary policies ensure aggregate stability. Overly aggressive inflation-fighting actions are destabilizing under sticky prices. Macroeconomic dynamics following either interest-rate normalization or temporary monetary tightening critically depend upon the tax structure and the steady-state debt-equity ratio.
    Keywords: Corporate Finance; Firm Financial Structure; Corporate and Personal Taxation; Interest Rate Policy; Equilibrium Dynamics; Monetary Policy Shocks.
    JEL: E31 E52 G32 H24 H25
    Date: 2024–09–12
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:pra:mprapa:122021
  22. By: Ozili, Peterson K
    Abstract: Digital innovations are emerging to solve known problems using new digital tools or technologies. Digital innovations also have wide application for financial inclusion. Private sector agents are using digital innovations to increase financial inclusion in remarkable ways. This chapter explores the recent digital innovations that are changing the financial inclusion landscape toward digital financial inclusion. The study used the discourse analysis methodology. It was found that digital innovations, such as central bank digital currency (CBDC), cryptocurrency, embedded finance, artificial intelligence, wallet as a service (WaaS), Fintech, Bigtech, and decentralized finance (DeFi), are helping to accelerate digital financial inclusion in many parts of the world. Each of these digital innovations serve a specific purpose, and they contribute to accelerating digital financial inclusion in unique ways, even though they all pose some risks that can be mitigated with careful and purposeful regulation.
    Keywords: Digital innovation; Financial inclusion; CBDC; Cryptocurrency; Embedded finance; Artificial intelligence; Wallet as a service; Fintech; Bigtech; DeFi.
    JEL: G21 O33
    Date: 2024
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:pra:mprapa:121848
  23. By: Sergio A. Correia; Stephan Luck; Emil Verner
    Abstract: Why do banks fail? We create a panel covering most commercial banks from 1865 through 2023 to study the history of failing banks in the United States. Failing banks are characterized by rising asset losses, deteriorating solvency, and an increasing reliance on expensive non-core funding. Commonalities across failing banks imply that failures are highly predictable using simple accounting metrics from publicly available financial statements. Predictability is high even in the absence of deposit insurance, when depositor runs were common. Bank-level fundamentals also forecast aggregate waves of bank failures during systemic banking crises. Altogether, our evidence suggests that the ultimate cause of bank failures and banking crises is almost always and everywhere a deterioration of bank fundamentals. Bank runs can be rejected as a plausible cause of failure for most failures in the history of the U.S. and are most commonly a consequence of imminent failure. Depositors tend to be slow to react to an increased risk of bank failure, even in the absence of deposit insurance.
    Keywords: bank runs; bank failures; financial
    JEL: G01 G21 N20 N24
    Date: 2024–09–01
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:fip:fednsr:98773
  24. By: Martin, Ertl (Institute for Advanced Studies Vienna, Austria); Fortin, Ines (Institute for Advanced Studies Vienna, Austria); Hlouskova, Jaroslava (Institute for Advanced Studies Vienna, Austria); Koch, Sebastian P. (Institute for Advanced Studies Vienna, Austria); Kunst, Robert M. (Institute for Advanced Studies Vienna, Austria); Sögner, Leopold (Institute for Advanced Studies Vienna, Austria and Vienna Graduate School of Finance (VGSF))
    Abstract: Recently, many countries were hit by a series of macroeconomic shocks, most notably as a consequence of the COVID-19 pandemic and Russia’s invasion in Ukraine, raising inflation rates to multi-decade highs and suspending well-documented macroeconomic relationships. To capture these tail events, we propose a mixed-frequency Bayesian vector autoregressive (BVAR) model with t-distributed innovations or with stochastic volatility. While inflation, industrial production, oil and gas prices are available at monthly frequencies, real gross domestic product (GDP) is observed at a quarterly frequency. Thus, we apply a mixed-frequency framework using the forward-filtering-backward-sampling algorithm to generate monthly real GDP growth rates. We forecast inflation in those euro area countries which extensively import energy from Russia and therefore have been heavily exposed to the recent oil and gas price shocks. To measure the forecast performance of our mixed-frequency BVAR model, we compare these inflation forecasts with those generated by a battery of competing inflation forecasting models. The proposed BVAR models dominate the competition for all countries in terms of the log predictive density score.
    Keywords: Bayesian VAR, mixed-frequency, forward-filtering-backward-sampling, inflation forecasting
    JEL: C5 E3
    Date: 2024–09
    URL: https://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ihs:ihswps:number56

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