Working paper/research report

Unconventional Monetary Policy Shocks and the Spillovers to Emerging Markets


Authors listTillmann, Peter

Publication year2014

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2477246

Title of seriesHKIMR Working Paper

Number in series2014, 18


Abstract

Unconventional monetary policy such as Quantitative Easing (QE) is often considered to have considerable spillover effects on emerging market economies (EME). Aims at quantifying these effects so far mostly use high-frequency data around announcement dates, panels or VAR models. This paper proposes an alternative way to estimate the effects of QE on emerging markets that allows us to include macroeconomic, i.e. low-frequency, data together with announcement dates. A Qual VAR is estimated that integrates binary information of QE announcements with an otherwise standard VAR including US and emerging market variables. The model uncovers the Fed's latent, unobservable propensity for QE and generates impulse responses for EME variables to QE shocks. The results suggest that QE has strong effects on EME's financial conditions and plays a large role in explaining capital inflows, equity prices and exchange rates.




Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleTillmann, P. (2014) Unconventional Monetary Policy Shocks and the Spillovers to Emerging Markets. (HKIMR Working Paper, 2014, 18). Hong Kong: Hong Kong Institute for Monetary Research. https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2477246

APA Citation styleTillmann, P. (2014). Unconventional Monetary Policy Shocks and the Spillovers to Emerging Markets. (HKIMR Working Paper, 2014, 18). Hong Kong Institute for Monetary Research. https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2477246


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