MONETARY POLICY SHOCKS, OUTPUT AND PRICES IN SOUTH AFRICA: A TEST OF POLICY IRRELEVANCE PROPOSITION

The study tests the policy irrelevance proposition in the inflation targeting monetary policy environment in South Africa, as well as in the context of a dichotomy between anticipated and unanticipated policy shocks. Findings from estimates of monetary policy reaction function confirmed that an open...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of developing areas 2013-09, Vol.47 (2), p.363-386
Hauptverfasser: Ajilore, Taiwo, Ikhide, Sylvanus
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description The study tests the policy irrelevance proposition in the inflation targeting monetary policy environment in South Africa, as well as in the context of a dichotomy between anticipated and unanticipated policy shocks. Findings from estimates of monetary policy reaction function confirmed that an open economy implicit Taylor rule characterised the monetary policy instrument in South Africa, providing evidence that suggests that the monetary policy has, indeed, been conducted systematically on the basis of information from past inflation and the output gap. While aggregates of evidence invalidates rational expectations' PIP proposition in South Africa, doubts exists about the capacity of inflation targeting monetary policy in curbing inflationary pressures in the economy. For policy, this study supports calls for supplementing the inflation targeting framework with targets for other real variables, such as output and employment.
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source Business Source Complete; Jstor Complete Legacy
subjects Africa
Aggregates
Analysis
Business cycles
Central banks
Economic growth
Economic planning
Economic policy
Employment
Error correction & detection
Hypotheses
Inflation
Inflation rates
Inflation targeting
Interest rates
Investigations
Macroeconomics
Monetary economics
Monetary policy
Monetary theory
Neutrality
Price shocks
Prices
Rational expectations theory
South Africa
Studies
Taylor rule
Transition economies
Vector autoregression
title MONETARY POLICY SHOCKS, OUTPUT AND PRICES IN SOUTH AFRICA: A TEST OF POLICY IRRELEVANCE PROPOSITION
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