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U.S. monetary policy normalization and global interest rates

Version 5 2024-03-12, 15:36
Version 4 2024-02-12, 09:45
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posted on 2024-03-12, 15:36 authored by Carlos Caceres, Yan Carriere-Swallow, Ishak Demir, Bertrand Gruss

As the Federal Reserve continues to normalize its monetary policy, this paper studies the impact of U.S. interest rates on rates in other countries. We find a modest but nontrivial pass-through from U.S. to domestic short-term interest rates on average. We show that, to a large extent, this comovement reflects synchronized business cycles. However, there is important heterogeneity across countries, and we find evidence of limited monetary autonomy in some cases. The co-movement of longer term interest rates is larger and more pervasive. We distinguish between U.S. interest rate movements that surprise markets versus those that are anticipated, and find that most countries receive greater spillovers from the former. We also distinguish between movements in the U.S. term premium and the expected path of risk-free rates, concluding that countries respond differently to these shocks. Finally, we explore the determinants of monetary autonomy and find strong evidence for the role of exchange rate flexibility, capital account openness, but also for other factors, such as dollarization of financial system liabilities, and the credibility of fiscal and monetary policy.

History

School affiliated with

  • Department of Accountancy, Finance and Economics (Research Outputs)

Publisher

IMF

External DOI

ISSN

1018-5941

ISBN

9781475543056

Date Submitted

2017-08-02

Date Accepted

2016-09-16

Date of First Publication

2016-09-16

Date of Final Publication

2016-09-16

Date Document First Uploaded

2017-07-28

ePrints ID

28086