The Policy Interest-Rate Pass-Through in Central America

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Author/Editor: Stephanie Medina Cas, Alejandro Carrion-Menendez, Florencia Frantischek
Release Date: © October, 2011
ISBN : 978-1-46399-078-7
Stock #: WPIEE2011240

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Description

Several Central American (CADR) central banks with independent monetary policies have adopted policy interest rates as their main instrument to signal their monetary policy stances, often in the context of adopting or transitioning to inflation targeting regimes. This paper finds that the interest-rate transmission mechanism, or the pass-through of the policy rate to market rates, is generally weaker and slower in CADR than in the LA6, the countries selected as benchmarks. A variety of potential factors behind this finding are examined, including the degrees of financial dollarization, exchange rate flexibility, bank concentration, financial sector development, and fiscal dominance. Through panel data analysis, the study suggests that the transmission mechanism can be strengthened by increasing exchange rate flexibility, and, over time, by adopting measures towards reducing financial dollarization, developing the financial sector, and reducing bank concentration.

Taxonomy

Banks and banking , Central banks , Economic policy , Financial institutions and markets , Interest rate policy , Monetary policy




More publications in this series: Working Papers


More publications by: Stephanie Medina Cas ; Alejandro Carrion-Menendez ; Florencia Frantischek