Asymmetric monetary transmission?: evidence from CEE region
diploma thesis (DEFENDED)
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Permanent link
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11956/40736Identifiers
Study Information System: 110860
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- Kvalifikační práce [18289]
Author
Advisor
Referee
Geršl, Adam
Faculty / Institute
Faculty of Social Sciences
Discipline
Economics and Finance
Department
Institute of Economic Studies
Date of defense
13. 9. 2012
Publisher
Univerzita Karlova, Fakulta sociálních vědLanguage
English
Grade
Excellent
Keywords (English)
Monetary transmission asymmetries, Credit growth, Financial structure, LSTVAR, PCHVARThis thesis investigates monetary transmission asymmetries in CEE region. The first part addresses the role of credit growth in monetary transmission in the Czech Republic. Employing Logistic Smooth Transition Vector Autoregression model over the 1998:M1-2012:M3 period, we find that high credit growth dampens the effectiveness of monetary policy. No asymmetries in relative effects of contractionary and expansionary monetary policy shocks have been documented. In the second part, we apply the variation of Panel VAR to examine the role of financial structure in monetary transmission. The analysis is conducted on a sample of eight CEE states, encompassing the 1999:Q1-2009:Q4 period. Higher credit dependence is found to enhance the interest rate pass-through. However, cross-country asymmetries vanish when the credit dependence is interacted with the measure of banking sector competition. The ultimate role of financial structure in output and price fluctuations is indeterminable.
This thesis investigates monetary transmission asymmetries in CEE region. The first part addresses the role of credit growth in monetary transmission in the Czech Republic. Employing Logistic Smooth Transition Vector Autoregression model over the 1998:M1-2012:M3 period, we find that high credit growth dampens the effectiveness of monetary policy. No asymmetries in relative effects of contractionary and expansionary monetary policy shocks have been documented. In the second part, we apply the variation of Panel VAR to examine the role of financial structure in monetary transmission. The analysis is conducted on a sample of eight CEE states, encompassing the 1999:Q1-2009:Q4 period. Higher credit dependence is found to enhance the interest rate pass-through. However, cross-country asymmetries vanish when the credit dependence is interacted with the measure of banking sector competition. The ultimate role of financial structure in output and price fluctuations is indeterminable.