Exchange Rate, Second Round Effects and Inflation Processes Evidence From South Africa /

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
المؤلفون الرئيسيون: Ndou, Eliphas (مؤلف), Gumata, Nombulelo (مؤلف), Tshuma, Mthokozisi Mncedisi (مؤلف)
مؤلف مشترك: SpringerLink (Online service)
الملخص:XXVIII, 416 p. 208 illus., 22 illus. in color.
text
اللغة:الإنجليزية
منشور في: Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan, 2019.
الطبعة:1st ed. 2019.
الموضوعات:
الوصول للمادة أونلاين:https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-13932-2
التنسيق: الكتروني كتاب الكتروني
جدول المحتويات:
  • Part I: The changing size of second-round effects
  • 1. Introduction. 2. Policy implications of ERPT and ongoing debates
  • 3. Second round effects, exchange rate depreciation, inflation and average wage settlements
  • 4. Second round effects, remuneration per worker, exchange rate depreciation shock and inflation expectations
  • 5. Second-round effects, private sector wage inflation and exchange rate depreciation shocks
  • 6. Second round effects of oil price shocks to consumer price inflation and the unit labour costs channel
  • Part II: Monetary and fiscal policy credibility and changing exchange rate pass-through
  • 7. Monetary policy credibility and the time varying exchange rate pass-through to inflation
  • 8. Monetary policy credibility and the exchange rate pass-through to inflation
  • 9. Does the monetary policy channel impact the transmission of exchange rate depreciation shocks to inflation?
  • 10. Does monetary policy credibility impact the responses of unit labour costs to exchange rate depreciation shocks?
  • 11. Does monetary policy credibility play a role in transmission of oil price shocks to inflation expectations?
  • 12. Does monetary policy credibility affect market-based inflation expectations?
  • Part III: Trade openness, Consumer and business confidence and exchange rate pass-through
  • 13. Does the consumer confidence channel affect the response of inflation to exchange rate depreciation shocks?
  • 14. Does weak business confidence impact the pass-through of the exchange rate depreciation shocks to inflation?
  • 15. Does exchange rate volatility impact the pass-through of the exchange rate depreciation shocks to inflation?
  • 16. Does trade openness matter for the response of inflation to exchange rate depreciation shocks?
  • Part IV: Fiscal policy credibility and changing exchange rate pass-through
  • 17. Does fiscal policy credibility matter for the exchange rate pass-through to inflation in South Africa?
  • 18. Fiscal policy credibility and time varying exchange rate pass-through to consumer price inflation
  • 19. Is the impact of high monetary policy credibility on inflation and the ERPT reinforced by fiscal policy credibility?
  • Part V: Regulated price, inflation process and monetary policy influence
  • 20. What is the role and cost of administered prices? Evidence from monetary policy responses to positive inflation shocks
  • 21. Monetary and fiscal policy interactions in inflation process: The role of fuel levies channel
  • 22. Monetary and fiscal policy interactions in inflation process: The role of public transport inflation channel
  • 23. The distributive effects of monetary policy: Evidence form inflation rates by deciles and rural areas
  • Part VI: Asymmetric interest rate pass-through
  • 24. Is there any evidence of the amount and adjustment asymmetries of lending rate reaction to the repo rate changes?
  • 25 Is there evidence of rigidity in the corporate lending rate adjustment following repo rate changes?
  • 26. Does the flexible mortgage rate exhibit asymmetrical response to changes in the repo rate?
  • 27. What is the role of competition in the banking sector on the interest rate pass-through and loan intermediation mark-up?
  • 28. Does consumption growth respond asymmetrically to positive and negative repo rate changes?
  • 29. Does the household financial wealth explain the asymmetric response of consumption to monetary policy shock in South Africa?.