Exchange Rate Pass-Through and Monetary Integration in the Euro Area
Published: 11 August 2011
By: Ayako Saiki
The purpose of this study is to examine how monetary integration affects the exchange rate pass-through, by testing whether monetary policy convergence in the euro area led to a convergence in terms of exchange rate pass-through. We conduct a comparative study between the “experiment group” (the euro area) and the “control group” (non-euro industrial countries). We find evidence for stronger convergence of exchange rate pass-through for the euro area economies as a group, especially around the 1980s. The group of non-euro industrial countries also had conditional convergence (convergence with permanent cross-sectional heterogeneity) in exchange rate pass-through, but its cross-sectional dispersion remains substantially larger compared to the euro area. This indicates that monetary integration affects the exchange rate pass-through. This has an important policy implication for the euro area, especially for the new member countries, as their exchange rate pass-through would not remain constant or purely exogenous; it should also converge to the euro area average as they work to achieve the Maastricht Criteria.
Keywords: Monetary Policy, Central Banks and Their Policies, International Monetary Arrangements and Institutions.
JEL Classification: E52, E58, F33.
Working paper no. 308
308 - Exchange Rate Pass-Through and Monetary Integration in the Euro Area
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