Suchergebnisse
Filter
8 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
The effect of exchange rate movements on heterogeneous plants: A quantile regression analysis
In this paper, we examine how the effect of movements in the real exchange rate on manufacturing plants depends on the plant's placement within the productivity distribution. Appreciations of the local currency expose domestic plants to more competition from abroad as export opportunities shrink and import competition intensifies. As a result, smaller less productive plants are forced from the market, which truncates the lower end of the productivity distribution. For surviving plants, appreciations can lead to a reduction in plant size, which, in the presence of scale economies, can lower productivity. We examine these mechanisms using quantile regression, which allows for the study of the conditional distribution of industry productivity. Using plant-level data that covers the entire Canadian manufacturing sector from 1984 to 1997, we find that many industries exhibit a downward sloping quantile regression curve, meaning that movements in the exchange rate do, indeed, have distributional effects on productivity.
BASE
On the nexus of monetary policy and financial stability: Recent developments and research
Because financial and macroeconomic conditions are tightly interconnected, financial stability considerations are an important element of any monetary policy framework. Yet, the circumstances under which it would be appropriate for the Bank to use monetary policy to lean against financial risks need to be more fully specified (Côté 2014). The extent to which financial stability concerns should be taken into account by monetary policy will be a priority topic of research at the Bank for the renewal of the inflation-control target agreement in 2016. This paper reviews four considerations of interest, taking stock of key domestic and international developments and knowledge gained over the past few years: (i) Canada and other countries have made significant progress in the implementation of micro- and macroprudential regulatory reforms, and limited existing research finds that most of these policies were effective in reducing the potential need for leaning by monetary policy; (ii) the effectiveness of the monetary policy transmission mechanism depends on the state of the financial system, implying that financial system conditions need to be taken into account by monetary policy; (iii) although exceptionally low interest rates and other forms of monetary stimulus are sometimes needed to support growth and achieve inflation-target mandates, they may lead to excessive risk-taking activities and therefore contribute to the buildup of financial imbalances; and (iv) coordination of monetary and macroprudential policies for dealing with imbalances may, in some circumstances, be beneficial. The paper concludes by identifying future areas of research to further clarify the role of monetary policy in addressing financial stability risks. ; Parce que les conditions financières et les conditions macroéconomiques sont étroitement liées, les considérations entourant la stabilité financière occupent une place importante dans tout cadre de politique monétaire. Pour autant, il faut préciser davantage dans quelles circonstances il ...
BASE
Trade Flows and Exchange Rates: Importers, Exporters and Products
In: NBER Working Paper No. w26314
SSRN
Working paper
Importers and exporters in exchange rate pass-through and currency invoicing
In: Journal of international economics, Band 105, S. 187-204
ISSN: 0022-1996
Exchange Rate Pass-Through, Currency of Invoicing and Market Share
In: NBER Working Paper No. w21413
SSRN
Trade Flows and Exchange Rates: Importers, Exporters and Products
In: INEC-D-21-00544
SSRN
Measuring potential output at the Bank of Canada: The extended multivariate filter and the integrated framework
Estimating potential output and the output gap - the difference between actual output and its potential - is important for the proper conduct of monetary policy. However, the measurement and interpretation of potential output, and hence the output gap, is fraught with uncertainty, since it is unobservable. It is therefore important that we continually expand and improve upon existing models, and innovate by testing new approaches and incorporating them into the analysis of potential output and the output gap. Within this context, this paper first provides an assessment of the extended multivariate filter (EMVF), which the Bank has used since the late 1990s to come up with a baseline measure of the output gap. It is determined that the EMVF has several limitations that need to be addressed. Consequently, a modified version of the EMVF incorporating revised conditioning information is presented. In addition, a newly developed methodology, the integrated framework (IF), provides a separate analysis of trend labour input and trend labour productivity, and in doing so accounts for more long-term structural changes in the economy. While neither of these approaches is perfect, and both have limitations, they represent improvements over the conventional method. The paper also outlines how the modified EMVF, the IF, and information from the Bank's Business Outlook Survey and other sources are used to come up with an estimate of the current output gap and the future growth rate of potential output. ; L'estimation de la production potentielle et de l'écart de production – soit la différence entre la production effective et potentielle – est importante pour la conduite appropriée de la politique monétaire. Cependant, la production potentielle n'étant pas observable, la mesure et l'interprétation de cette variable, et par conséquent de l'écart de production, sont entourées d'incertitude. Il est donc essentiel de continuellement développer et améliorer les modèles existants, d'innover en mettant à l'essai de nouvelles ...
BASE