Globalization of Capital Markets and Monetary Policy Independence in Korea
Author(s) -
So Young Kim,
K SHIN
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
kdi journal of economic policy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1976-6904
pISSN - 1738-656X
DOI - 10.23895/kdijep.2010.32.2.1
Subject(s) - independence (probability theory) , globalization , monetary policy , economics , monetary economics , capital market , capital (architecture) , financial globalization , international economics , economic system , market economy , finance , geography , statistics , mathematics , archaeology
This paper empirically examines whether Korean monetary policy is independent of U.S. monetary policy during the post-crisis period in which capital account is liberalized and floating exchange rate regime is adopted and during the pre-crisis period in which capital mobility is restricted and tightly managed exchange rate regime is adopted. Before capital account liberalization, monetary autonomy can be achieved in view of the trillema, even under tightly managed exchange rate regime, as capital mobility is restricted. On the other hand, for the period after capital account liberalization, monetary autonomy can be also achieved in view of the trillema, as exchange rate stability is given up. Securing monetary autonomy, however, may not be easy under liberalized capital account for a small open economy like Korea. Huge capital movements can generate excessive instability in foreign exchange and asset markets. Strengthened international economic linkages may also be another factor to prevent monetary policy from being independent. Using block-exogenous structural VAR model, the effects of U.S. monetary policy shocks on Korean economy are examined. Empirical results show that Korean monetary policy is not independent of U.S. monetary policy for both periods before and after capital account liberalization. For the period after capital account liberalization, Korea does not seem to have implemented floating exchange rate policy in practice, which may lead Korean monetary policy to be dependent on U.S. monetary policy. For the period after capital account liberalization, portfolio flows respond dramatically to the U.S. monetary policy, which may also keep Korean monetary policy from being independent. 1997 . , , . , .
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