Extent:
Online-Ressource (1 online resource (73 pages).)
Series:
Type of publication: Book / Working Paper
Language: English
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references at the end of each chapters. - Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (ebrary, viewed April 16, 2014)
Front Cover; Contents; Preface; Acknowledgments; About the Authors; Abbreviations; Executive Summary; Chapter 1Introduction; Chapter 2Stylized Facts; Which Countries Have Used Reserve Requirements as a Macroeconomic Stabilization Tool?; Figures; Figure 2.1 Frequency of Changes in Reserve Requirements (1970-2011); What Have Been the Cyclical Properties of RR as a Macroeconomic Stabilization Tool?; Figure 2.2 Active versus Passive Reserve Requirement Policy (1970-2011); Figure 2.3 Frequency of Changes in Reserve Requirements (2005-11)
Figure 2.4 Cyclicality of Reserve Requirement Policy (1970-2011)Figure 2.5a Cyclicality of Reserve Requirement Policy (1970-2004); Figure 2.5b Cyclicality of Reserve Requirement Policy (2005-11); How Is RRP Related to the Credit Cycle?; Figure 2.6 Correlation of Private Credit with GDP (1970-2011); What Is the Relation between RRP and Monetary Policy?; Figure 2.7 Private Credit for Developing Countries (1970-2011); Figure 2.8 Cyclicality of RRP versus Private Credit (Active Countries, 1970-2011); Figure 2.9 Cyclicality of Interest Rate Policy (1970-2011)
Figure 2.10a Cyclicality of Interest Rate Policy (1970-2004)Figure 2.10b Cyclicality of Interest Rate Policy (2005-11); Tables; Table 2.1 Policy Mix Matrix (1970-2011); How Does Foreign Exchange Market Intervention Fit into the Picture?; Table 2.2a Policy Mix Matrix (1970-2004); Table 2.2b Policy Mix Matrix (2005-11); Figure 2.11 Cyclicality of International Reserves (1970-2011); Figure 2.12 Monetary versus Foreign Exchange Market Intervention Policy (1970-2011); Figure 2.13 RRP versus Foreign Exchange Market Intervention (1970-2011)
Chapter 3An Illustration of Policy Responses for Four Latin American CountriesFigure 3.1 Policy Response to a Real GDP Shock (One Standard-Deviation Shock); Figure 3.2 Policy Response to a Nominal Exchange Rate Depreciation Shock; Boxes; Box 3.1 The Narrative Approach to Identification; Chapter 4Policy Rationale; The Need for a Second Instrument; Figure 4.1 Cyclicality of Nominal Exchange Rates (1970-2011); Why Do RR Often Serve as the Second Instrument?; Figure 4.2 Monetary versus "Currency Defense" Policy (1970-2011); Which Country Characteristics Explain Different Policy Mixes?
Figure 4.3 Relative Effect of Reserve Requirement versus Monetary PolicyTable 4.1 Currency Crises and Policy Mix; Table 4.2 Credit and Policy Mix; Table 4.3 Capital Account Openness and Policy Mix; Chapter 5Microprudential Effects of Business Cycle Management; Box 5.1 Macroprudential Policy in Emerging Markets: The Cases of Brazil and Turkey; Tradeoffs over the Business Cycle; Chapter 6Policy Tensions and Tradeoffs; Chapter 7Policy Conclusions; Bibliography; Back Cover
ISBN: 978-1-4648-0213-3 ; 978-1-4648-0212-6 ; 978-1-4648-0212-6
Source:
ECONIS - Online Catalogue of the ZBW
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012685877