“Information and pure monetary policy shocks in monetary policy surprises : transmission of U.S. monetary policy to Emerging Markets and implications for the banking sector”
Professor Advisor
dc.contributor.advisor
Coble, David
Professor Advisor
dc.contributor.advisor
Céspedes, Luis Felipe
Author
dc.contributor.author
Beltrán Bravo, Felipe
Admission date
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2024-09-23T16:03:38Z
Available date
dc.date.available
2024-09-23T16:03:38Z
Publication date
dc.date.issued
2023
Identifier
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10.58011/vn9h-1b07
Identifier
dc.identifier.uri
https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/201072
Abstract
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Chapter 1 analyzes how monetary policy surprises in the U.S. affect emerging market
economies (EMs) by focusing on the transmission through the real exchange rate (RER)
and country spreads (EMBI). To do so, I disentangle U.S. interest rate movements between
both a pure monetary policy shock and an information shock; while the former is constructed based on high-frequency movements of interest rates around Federal Open Market
Committee (FOMC) announcements, the latter builds from employment releases. I quantify
the relative impacts using a structural VAR (SVAR) model with external instruments. The
results suggest that a pure monetary policy shock produces a persistent appreciation of the
RER in the U.S. coupled with an increase of the EMBI, which induces contractionary effects
in the real sector of EMs. In contrast, an information shock does not necessarily produce
such contractionary effects in EMs. These results contribute to the literature by identifying
the specific drivers behind Fed announcements and its transmission channels to EMs.
Chapter 2 analyzes how monetary policy surprises in Chile affects the real and financial
sector separating between the same shocks related to monetary policy interest rate mentioned
in Chapter 1. Using inter-day movements of futures of interest rate in the banking system, we
identify an information shock when labor data is released and a pure monetary policy shock
when the central bank reveals their interest rate decision, and their effects are quantified
through an external vector autoregression model. Our results suggest that a pure monetary
policy shock produce an appreciation of nominal exchange rate, and contractionary effects
on the economy. However, an information shock does not necessarily produce adverse effects.
This paper contribute to the literature in two dimensions: studying the effect of the main
driver behind the central bank announcements, and their transmission to the banking sector
and consequently to the real and monetary sector.
es_ES
Lenguage
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en
es_ES
Publisher
dc.publisher
Universidad de Chile
es_ES
Type of license
dc.rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States
“Information and pure monetary policy shocks in monetary policy surprises : transmission of U.S. monetary policy to Emerging Markets and implications for the banking sector”