Anand, Rahul. 2010. Three Essays On Monetary Policy In Economies With Financial Frictions.
Doctoral Dissertation, Cornell University.
The objective of this
dissertation is to understand the role of financial frictions in the
transmission of shocks and their effect on the monetary policy transmission
mechanism. To accomplish the task, we develop Dynamic Stochastic General
equilibrium models with financial frictions. In the first chapter, we develop a
model to analytically determine the appropriate price index to target in the
presence of financial frictions (where a fraction of households are constrained
to consume their wage income each period). The analysis suggests that in the
presence of financial frictions, a welfare-maximizing central bank should adopt
flexible headline inflation targeting - i.e. a headline inflation target but
with some weight on the output gap. These results are particularly relevant for
emerging markets, where the share of food expenditures in total consumption
expenditures is high and a large proportion of consumers are credit
constrained. In the second chapter, we develop a small open economy model with
macrofinancial linkages. The model includes a financial accelerator -
entrepreneurs are assumed to partially finance investment using domestic and
foreign currency debt - to assess the importance of financial frictions in the
amplification and propagation of the effects of transitory shocks to
productivity, interest rates and net worth of firms. We use Bayesian estimation
techniques to estimate the model using India data. The model is used to assess
the importance of the financial accelerator in India and to assess the
optimality of the current monetary policy rule. In the third chapter, we develop
a small open economy New Keynesian model with financial frictions and an active
banking sector for India. We find that the presence of a monopolistic banking
sector with sticky interest rate setting attenuates the shocks. However, if the
interest rates are flexible it results in the amplification of shocks. We also
find that an unexpected reduction in bank capital can have a substantial impact
on the real economy and particularly on investment. Use of nonmonetary policy
tools result in greater volatility as compared to when central banks use
traditional monetary tightening.
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