University of Lincoln
Browse

Spillovers of global liquidity and monetary policy divergence from advanced economies to Vietnam.

Download (1.89 MB)
Version 3 2025-04-14, 15:36
Version 2 2024-03-13, 16:20
Version 1 2023-12-20, 12:07
journal contribution
posted on 2025-04-14, 15:36 authored by Chau LeChau Le, Xuan Vinh Vo, Andy Mullineux, Huyen Nguyen

This paper studies the spillovers of global liquidity and monetary policy divergence from advanced economies to Vietnam. Applying the structural Bayesian Vector Auto-Regressive model with Sims–Zha prior distribution, we find that unconventional monetary policy shocks of major central banks led to a reduction in inflation and short-term interest rate as well as an appreciation of local currency in Vietnam. However, market liquidity provided by surge in the cross-border credit flow led to a temporary upward pressure on inflation, interest and foreign exchange rates. Both types of global liquidity caused an insignificant effect on stock price which evidence the dominance of traditional interest rate and bank-lending over asset price channels in Vietnam. When disintegrating the effects among the monetary shocks from the US, European Union and Japan, the empirical result reveals some evidence of contradictory effects. Accordingly, GDP decreased after Fed’s asset purchase while it slightly increased following the same action from European Central Bank. Quantitative easing shocks also caused a depreciation in USD and Euro, resulting in a decrease in foreign exchange rate but large-scale asset purchase from the Bank of Japan is translated into an upward trend in the exchange rate.

History

School affiliated with

  • Lincoln Business School (Research Outputs)
  • College of Arts, Social Sciences, and Humanities (Research Outputs)
  • Lincoln International Business School (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Singapore Economics Review

Publisher

World Scientific

ISSN

0217-5908

eISSN

1793-6837

Date Submitted

2022-05-13

Date Accepted

2022-03-04

Date of First Publication

2022-05-11

Date of Final Publication

2022-05-11

Open Access Status

  • Not Open Access

Date Document First Uploaded

2022-05-12

ePrints ID

49256

Will your conference paper be published in proceedings?

  • N/A

Usage metrics

    University of Lincoln (Research Outputs)

    Categories

    Licence

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC