CAPITAL CONTROLS, TWO-TIERED EXCHANGE RATE SYSTEMS AND EXCHANGE RATE POLICY: THE SOUTH AFRICAN EXPERIENCE
South Africa's 40 years of experience with capital controls on residents and non-residents (1961-2001) reads like a collection of examples of perverse unanticipated effects of legislation and regulation. We show that the presence of capital controls on residents and non-residents enabled the South African Reserve Bank to target domestic interest rates (and or the exchange rate) via interventions in the (commercial) foreign exchange market. This provides an early rationale for anchoring SA monetary policy via the exchange rate, rather than via domestic interest rates. This suggests not only that the capital controls themselves exhibited substantial institutional inertia, but that this same institutional inertia also applied to the monetary policy regime. A plausible reason for this is that for most of the 20th century in South Africa. (partial) capital controls and exchange rate based monetary policies were like Siamese twins - almost impossible to separate. Copyright (c) 2009 The Author. Journal compilation (c) 2009 Economic Society of South Africa.
Year of publication: |
2009
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Authors: | Schaling, Eric |
Published in: |
South African Journal of Economics. - Economic Society of South Africa - ESSA, ISSN 0038-2280. - Vol. 77.2009, 4, p. 505-530
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Publisher: |
Economic Society of South Africa - ESSA |
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