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Direct Inflation Targeting and Nominal Convergence: The Czech Case

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Abstract

This study analyses the impact of direct inflation targeting (DIT) on monetary policy credibility in the Czech Republic, as evidenced by asset prices. It examines the effect of changes in the two-week repo rate (the official interest rate) on short and long–term market interest rates. It assumes the asymmetry of information and the existence of a stationary stochastic equilibrium with full knowledge of authorities reaction function. We find that at short maturities, the coefficients for changes in the official repo rate are lower in the DIT period than in the pre-crisis period. This implies that the hypothesis of no increase in the transparency of monetary policy with the introduction of DIT can be rejected. We find that bond yields and interest rate swap rates with maturities of 5 years and longer did not react significantly to official interest rate decisions in the DIT period. This is consistent with the hypothesis that monetary policy was credible both before and after introduction of DIT.

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Matoušek, R., Taci, A. Direct Inflation Targeting and Nominal Convergence: The Czech Case. Open Economies Review 14, 269–283 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1023935120371

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1023935120371

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