Working paper/research report

The Spillover Effects of U.S. Monetary Policy on Emerging Market Economies: Breaks, Asymmetries and Fundamentals


Authors listKim, Geun-Young; Park, Hail; Tillmann, Peter

Publication year2016

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2711579

Title of seriesBOK Working Paper

Number in series2016-1


Abstract

The recent implementation of unconventional monetary policies in advanced economies and the preparations for an eventual return to normalization have renewed the interest in spillover effects of monetary policy on emerging market economies. This paper estimates a series of VAR-X models for a set of 10 emerging economies, that is, VARs in which U.S. policy enters exogenously. The contribution of this paper is (1) to use an identified shock component of the U.S. (shadow) Federal Funds rate as a consistent policy instrument for conventional and unconventional policies, (2) to account for changes in the transmission of U.S. monetary policy over time, (3) to quantify asymmetries in the transmission of tightening and easing shocks, and (4) to relate the exposure of emerging countries with macroeconomic fundamentals. The results point to substantially nonlinear and asymmetric spillover effects, which pose challenges to policymakers.




Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleKim, G., Park, H. and Tillmann, P. (2016) The Spillover Effects of U.S. Monetary Policy on Emerging Market Economies: Breaks, Asymmetries and Fundamentals. (BOK Working Paper, 2016-1). Seoul: Economic Research Institute, Bank of Korea. https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2711579

APA Citation styleKim, G., Park, H., & Tillmann, P. (2016). The Spillover Effects of U.S. Monetary Policy on Emerging Market Economies: Breaks, Asymmetries and Fundamentals. (BOK Working Paper, 2016-1). Economic Research Institute, Bank of Korea. https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2711579


Last updated on 2025-21-05 at 17:13