Monetary Policy and the Propagation of Shocks Under Imperfect Exchange-Rate Pass-Through
Política monetaria y propagación de choques bajo transferencia imperfecta del tipo de cambio
Abstract
When the Mexican Crisis of 1994 occurred, the Central Bank of Mexico was forced to abandon its fixed exchange rate sys-tem.  Since  then,  monetary  policy  has  been  moving  toward  an  inflation  targeting  regime,  which  finally  became  the  op-erational monetary framework in 2001. Moreover, Calvo and Reinhart  (2000)  find  evidence  that  the  actions  taken  by  the  Mexican central bank seem to exhibit a fear of floating, which is a modern variant of managed floating. In addition, Ball and Reyes (2003) argue that the while inflation has been the num-ber  one  policy  issue  for  the  Mexican  central  bank,  at  times  this has required occasional intervention to offset inflationary exchange-rate  shocks.  However,  in  a  low  pass-through  envi-ronment,  the  policymaker  can  simultaneously  strictly  target  consumer price inflation (CPI), but still allow high volatility in the  nominal  exchange  rate  to  stabilize  the  real  economy  in  face of the shocks. This result emerges because the low-pass-through eliminates the trade-off between output volatility and inflation  volatility.  In  México  in  the  last  years  the  elasticity  of  the  exchange  rate  pass-through  to  general  consumer  prices  has been very low.
Fuente
Sobre México. Temas de Economía (ISSN: 2448-7325), Num. 1, Año 3, Enero-Junio (2017), pp. 46-65
Area de conocimiento
CIENCIAS SOCIALES
Temas
Central Bank
				;
				México
				;
				Monetary Policy
				;
				CIENCIAS SOCIALES
				;
				


