Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5056509 Economic Systems 2012 29 Pages PDF
Abstract

Estimated Taylor rules have become popular as a description of monetary policy conduct. There are numerous reasons why real monetary policy can be asymmetric and estimated Taylor rules nonlinear. This paper tests whether monetary policy can be described as asymmetric in three new European Union (EU) members (the Czech Republic, Hungary, and Poland) which apply an inflation targeting regime. Two different empirical frameworks are used: (i) Generalized Method of Moments (GMM) estimation of models that allow discrimination between sources of potential policy asymmetry but are conditioned by specific underlying relations, and (ii) a flexible framework of sample splitting where nonlinearity enters via a threshold variable and monetary policy is allowed to switch between regimes. We find generally little evidence for asymmetric policy driven by nonlinearities in economic systems, some evidence for asymmetric preferences, and some interesting evidence on policy switches driven by the intensity of financial distress in the economy.

► We test asymmetries in monetary policy of three new EU member states (CZE, HUN, POL). ► GMM estimator and sample spilling techniques are employed. ► Asymmetric preferences rather than nonlinearities in economic systems drive policy asymmetries. ► Evidence on policy switches according to the intensity of financial distress in the economy is found.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
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