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Tatsushi Okuda
The Chilean real estate sector has recently undergone adjustments which have increased the risks for the financial sector, but the system remains overall resilient. In the baseline, the real estate market is expected to modestly recover, and several factors mitigate credit risk. The buffers in the financial sector currently appear broadly adequate to absorb stresses from high long-term interest rates and the tail risk of a real estate crisis. Nevertheless, supervisors should monitor these risks closely, keep advancing in closing data gaps, and continue to extend stress test models to comprehensively capture real estate-specific risk factors.

Abstract

The analysis in the book suggests that LAC countries are facing substantial challenges related to climate change but have tools at their disposal to seize the opportunities that the climate change presents. To maximize opportunities and minimize the risks LAC countries will need to improve flexibility and adaptability of their economies. Policies aimed at supporting the reallocation of labor and capital across sectors, investing in basic skills and human capital, improving transparency and economic governance to encourage investment in technology and know-how, and creating fiscal space to manage the climate transition would help LAC countries position themselves to take advantage of the opportunities afforded by the climate transition.

Kelly Eckhold
,
Julia Faltermeier
,
Darryl King
,
Istvan Mak
, and
Dmitri Petrov
This paper examines emerging market and developing economy (EMDE) central bank interventions to maintain financial stability during the COVID-19 pandemic. Through empirical analysis and case study reviews, it identifies lessons for designing future programs to address challenges faced in EMDEs, including less-developed financial markets and lower levels of institutional credibility. The focus is on the functioning of the financial markets that are key to maintaining financial stability—money, securities, and FX funding markets. Several lessons emerge, including: (i) objectives should be well-specified and communicated to facilitate eventual exit; (ii) intervention triggers should prioritize liquidity metrics over prices; (iii) actions should be sufficiently large to address market dysfunction; (iv) the risks of fiscal dominance and moral hazard should be minimized; and (v) program design should incentivize self-liquidation by appropriate pricing or through short-term operations that quickly liquidate. While interventions may increase risks to central bank balance sheets, potentially challenging policy solvency and operational independence, a well-designed framework can significantly mitigate these risks.
International Monetary Fund. Monetary and Capital Markets Department
This Technical Assistance Report on the Seychelles discusses Stress Testing the Central Bank Balance Sheet (CBS). The CBS balance sheet is weak, due to the cost of carrying foreign exchange (FX) reserves. The conditions of CBS lending in Seychellois rupees (SCR) also contributed to weakening the CBS balance sheet. Multiyear budget planning would support the CBS’s balance sheet strength. A capital injection is necessary to strengthen the CBS’s balance sheet. The income stream of the CBS should be strengthened, through an increase in the authorized capital, to cover operational costs and the carry cost of the FX reserve. In addition, the profit distribution rule should be revised to allow the CBS to retain all distributable earnings if statutory capital is below the target level of 10 percent of monetary liabilities. A communications strategy should be prepared to bolster public support for the recapitalization plan. Communications should explain the causes of the losses, reiterate the commitment to the policy objective regardless of financial considerations, and present the solution devised to address the financial weakness.

Abstract

The high exposure of open economies to shocks makes them particularly vulnerable to volatile capital flows and advanced economy monetary policy spillovers. How should and do domestic policymakers respond? The traditional answer has been to use flexible exchange rates as a shock absorber. But flexible exchange rates may not offer full insulation when financial markets are imperfect. This book brings together recent empirical studies at the International Monetary Fund (IMF) on the effectiveness of different tools in responding to such shocks. The 18 chapters in this volume provide a rich background to the recently launched Integrated Policy Framework by the IMF. They comprise assessments of countries’ actual use of different tools, as well as in-depth evaluations of their effectiveness and side effects, covering macroprudential policies, monetary policy, foreign-exchange intervention, and capital flow management policies. Many of the studies involve new data and methods to tackle the inherently difficult problems in identifying and comparing the effects of policies under different circumstances. As a result, the volume offers the reader a comprehensive, in-depth coverage of the policy-oriented empirical research that has informed the development of a new way of thinking about open-economy macroeconomics at the IMF.

International Monetary Fund. Western Hemisphere Dept.

Abstract

After a stronger-than-expected recovery from the pandemic and continued resilience in early 2023, economic growth in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) is softening as the effect of tighter policies to combat inflation is taking hold and the external environment is weakening. The early and swift monetary tightening across the region since 2021, together with the withdrawal of most of the pandemic fiscal stimulus and the reversal of external price pressures, have helped put headline inflation on a downward trajectory. Core inflation has also started to ease, as price pressures are becoming less generalized, although it remains elevated amid strong labor markets and positive output gaps in some countries. Banking systems have weathered the rise in interest rates well and are generally healthy, though credit to the private sector is decelerating amid tighter supply conditions and weaker demand.

International Monetary Fund. Western Hemisphere Dept.
This paper highlights Chile’s Review under the Flexible Credit Line (FCL) Arrangement. Chile continues to qualify for the FCL by virtue of its very strong economic fundamentals and institutional policy frameworks, and sustained record of accomplishment of very strong macroeconomic policies. In view of the still elevated external risks, the authorities have expressed a desire to maintain the current level of access and are committed to gradually exit the arrangement conditional on the evolution of external risks. The authorities intend to continue to treat the arrangement as precautionary. External downside risks remain tied to a possible abrupt global slowdown and sharply tighter global financial conditions. Domestic risks relate particularly to potential discontent from unmet social demands and deterioration in security as well as uncertainty related to the health care sector. The FCL has provided a valuable buffer against tail risks and boosted market confidence by reinforcing Chile’s policy and institutional strengths.
John Hooley
,
Mr. Ashraf Khan
,
Claney Lattie
,
Istvan Mak
,
Ms. Natalia Salazar
,
Amanda Sayegh
, and
Mr. Peter Stella
We develop a stylized balance sheet framework to help identify ‘quasi-fiscal’ components of central bank crisis interventions and show how sources of fiscal risk are created from both the new claims and how they are funded. Combining central bank balance sheet data with survey evidence from intervention announcements, we document the risks to the public sector balance sheet from central banks’ interventions in response to the Covid-19 crisis, including non-conventional lending to the financial and non-financial sectors and large-scale purchases of government securities. Case study analysis indicates that management of fiscal risks from central bank crisis interventions varies greatly across countries, although several good practices can be identified.
International Monetary Fund. Western Hemisphere Dept.
This 2022 Article IV Consultation with Chile discusses that after an impressive recovery from the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic, the Chilean economy is undergoing a necessary transition toward sustainable growth amid a challenging external environment. Policy implementation remains very strong, geared toward correcting macroeconomic imbalances that built up during the pandemic while protecting the most vulnerable and advancing structural reforms, consistent with past IMF advice. The outlook is clouded with risks. On the external front, these stem from a possible abrupt global slowdown, sharply tighter global financial conditions, commodity price shocks, or an intensification of spillovers from Russia’s war in Ukraine. Domestic risks stem mostly from high inflation persisting for longer than expected, social discontent over high food and energy prices, or slow progress to meet social demands. The constitutional reform process will continue but uncertainty over possible outcomes has narrowed. Against a gloomy and uncertain global backdrop, policies need to navigate growth-inflation trade-offs, safeguard financial stability, and maintain fiscal sustainability while supporting the most vulnerable.
Mr. Faisal Ahmed
,
Mahir Binici
, and
Mr. Jarkko Turunen
Forward-looking monetary policy communication has become a key element of flexible inflation-targeting regimes across advanced and emerging market economies. The Reserve Bank of India’s implementation of a flexible inflation targeting framework since 2016 has been supported by a broad set of communication tools, more recently aided by policy innovations such as forward guidance on policy rates and, asset purchases, increasing the predictability of monetary policy. A review of the recent innovations of monetary policy communications during the initial waves of the pandemic suggests forward guidance likely played a key role in moderating uncertainty and supporting some asset prices. We also find that the relationship between monetary policy surprises and yields for government and corporate securities across all maturities are positive and statistically significant. The results support an important role for monetary policy communication in guiding market expectations about the monetary policy stance, including the likely path of policy interest rates.