Monetary and Exchange Rate Policy in an Oil Exporting Economy: The Case of Iran
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Ahmadreza Jalali Naeini * , Mohammad Amin Naderian  |
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Abstract: (19807 Views) |
For those resource (oil) exporting countries that are exposed to the terms of trade shocks and follow pro-cyclical fiscal policies, standard flexible inflation targeting with floating exchange rate may not be a suitable monetary policy framework. One of the approaches that has been discussed in the literature to improve stabilization policy is to insulate fiscal policy from the balance of payment shocks through activating a Currency Reserve Fund (CRF). In the context of a DSGE model that captures structural characteristics of the Iranian economy, the effect of activating a CRF on stabilization and welfare performance of three inflation targeting regimes: domestic inflation targeting, CPI inflation targeting, and real exchange rate targeting is evaluated in this paper. For this purpose, first we evaluate stabilization and welfare performance of the above-mentioned regimes under the following conditions: high financial vulnerability; both high exchange rate pass-through and openness, along with complete raiding of the oil windfalls. We compare this policy scenario with the scenarios in which CRF is active. The simulation results indicate that in the first scenario the real exchange rate targeting is the optimal Ramsey policy and the monetary authority must react to currency misalignments. With an active CRF, real exchange rate fluctuations are diminished. This contributes to creation of an environment conducive for implementing flexible inflation targeting of CPI without repeated interventions by the monetary authority in the currency market. |
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Full-Text [PDF 1268 kb]
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Type of Study: Theoretical Article |
Subject:
Monetary Policy, Central Banking, and the Supply of Money and Credit (E5) Received: 2015/08/15 | Accepted: 2017/07/24 | Published: 2017/09/24
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