Monetary Policy Operations of Debtor Central Banks in Mena Countries
University of Leipzig Working Paper No. 65
29 Pages Posted: 30 Oct 2007
Date Written: October 2007
Abstract
The paper analyses the monetary policy operations of central banks in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA). We distinguish the pattern of monetary policy operations of the liquidity providing central banks of the large industrialized countries (creditor central banks) and the liquidity absorbing central banks of emerging market economies (debtor central banks). Many debtor central banks provide liquidity through foreign exchange intervention in reaction to foreign exchange inflows. If the respective liquidity expansion is regarded as a threat to domestic price and financial stability, liquidity is partly absorbed through sterilization operations. The paper finds that most MENA countries are debtor central banks due to a general pattern of excessive liquidity creation as well as due to country specific reasons.
Keywords: Emerging Markets, Debtor Central Banks, Foreign Exchange Inflows, Sterilization
JEL Classification: F31
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
The East Asian Dollar Standard, Fear of Floating, and Original Sin
-
The Return to Soft Dollar Pegging in East Asia: Mitigating Conflicted Virtue
By Ronald Mckinnon and Gunther Schnabl
-
Synchronized Business Cycles in East Asia and Fluctuations in the Yen/Dollar Exchange Rate