Exchange Market Pressure and Monetary Policy Asia and Latin America in the 1990s
42 Pages Posted: 15 Feb 2006
Date Written: August 1999
Abstract
Exchange market pressure (EMP), the sum of exchange rate depreciation and reserve outflows (scaled by base money), summarizes the flow excess supply of money in a managed exchange rate regime. Examining Brazil, Chile, Mexico, Indonesia, Korea, and Thailand, this paper finds that monetary policy affects EMP as generally expected: contractionary monetary policy helps reduce EMP. The monetary policy stance is best measured by domestic credit growth (since interest rates contain both policy- and market-determined elements). In response to higher EMP, monetary authorities boosted domestic credit growth both in Mexico (confirming previous research) and in the Asian countries.
Keywords: Exchange Market Pressure Domestic Credit Exchange Rate Reserves Vector Autoregression
JEL Classification: E4 F3 F4
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
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