scholarly journals U.S. Monetary Policy Spillovers to GCC Countries

2019 ◽  
Vol 19 (304) ◽  
Author(s):  
Olumuyiwa Adedeji ◽  
Erik Roos ◽  
Sohaib Shahid ◽  
Ling Zhu

This paper provides empirical evidence that the size of the spillovers from U.S. monetary policy to non-oil GDP growth in the GCC countries depends on the level of oil prices. The potential channels through which oil prices could affect the effectiveness of monetary policy are discussed. We find that the level of oil prices tends to dampen or amplify the growth impact of changes in U.S. monetary policy on the non-oil economies in the GCC.

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Olumuyiwa Adedeji ◽  
Erik Roos ◽  
Sohaib Shahid ◽  
Ling Zhu

2018 ◽  
Vol 108 (12) ◽  
pp. 3891-3936 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kaiji Chen ◽  
Jue Ren ◽  
Tao Zha

We study how monetary policy in China influences banks’ shadow banking activities. We develop and estimate the endogenously switching monetary policy rule that is based on institutional facts and at the same time tractable in the spirit of Taylor (1993). This development, along with two newly constructed micro banking datasets, enables us to establish the following empirical evidence. Contractionary monetary policy during 2009–2015 caused shadow banking loans to rise rapidly, offsetting the expected decline of traditional bank loans and hampering the effectiveness of monetary policy on total bank credit. We advance a theoretical explanation of our empirical findings. (JEL E32, E52, G21, O16, O23, P24, P34)


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